Thanks heaps! I have read that guide multiple times to make sure I got everything from it. I have thrashed google and looked into the council but not state library so that helps as well.blakjak wrote:Search Google or your local council's or state's library database (I'm serious), use tag words like "canal" "drain" conduit" "bunker" "tunnel" and include your local area or suburb in the search field.
When walking/driving along roads look out for unusual dips in the road where a creek might have once passed, or weird shaped parks that are unusually long and narrow which were once creeks but are now covered over.
Here's a draining (and urbex in general) guide written by the late great Predator RIP...
http://sleepycity.net/approach-to-draining
I recommend anybody who is into urbex save and study that doc. It's a little bit outdated (written over 15 years ago), but it's still relevant. Save it, and study it well.
I have found a few abandondment from driving to work, taking different routes etc. but I'm looking more for drains in particular which is hard to do while driving to work and as I currently work 7 days I would like to do as much research as possible, make a list and hit as many possible locations in the small amount of time I'm not working.Midget wrote:If you commute a lot, try different routes and look around. I've found an abandonment and a couple other sites just by missing my stop on the bus. Then I decided to take it all the way because I don't have much to do.
Is that for abandonments? Industrial areas, can't believe i didn't think of that!Echo wrote:I just go for a work around some of the more industrial areas. If a place has graff on it or looks kinda rundown I might take a closer look.
Industrial parks are good, outer suburbs and stuff tend to have more abandoned places.DFEX wrote:Is that for abandonments? Industrial areas, can't believe i didn't think of that!Echo wrote:I just go for a work around some of the more industrial areas. If a place has graff on it or looks kinda rundown I might take a closer look.![]()
I use to dabble in the art of aerosol lol so I have a radar for it!
Thats how I have found the few abandoned places I've been to.
It depends on the environment but dust doesnt take long to build up, would of been cool to find a fresh location.Midget wrote:Slightly unrelated, but once I found what looked like to be an abandoned warehouse because I spied an open doorway from an adjacent building. Dust covered everything, but the calender was in the same month...
Exactly why i veiw the online version hahahaMidget wrote:I can't read newspapers on my commute because it's almost as big as me. I have trouble keeping everything together.
I stopped reading those fish wrappers when my dad stopped buying the Daily Sh1tagrah way back then.phytrix wrote:I feel your struggle MidgetThis is why I read the online version :3
I guess one find is better than no findtheedge wrote:I usually rely on the property sections to see if any sales are advertised. But the only one I've uncovered is the research complex that got sold off and demolished a couple of years ago.
Thank you - and your work - for keeping me in a job.theedge wrote:Luckily my work has a subscription to the fairfax papers. I prefer the paper edition over the online one btw.
Reverse search is something I didnt think of and if Wikimapia takes all the fun out, i wont be checking that site lol but thanks for the infokjwx wrote:Back to the topic at hand:
Social media/reverse image search: Seen a great urbex photo online but have no clue where it's from? Even if the poster doesn't give enough detail for you to find the address with a standard Google search, you can run that image through a reverse image search engine to see what else pops up. Doesn't work everytime but worth a shot.
Wikimapia: Has an abandoned category, though it's less fun when the location is handed to you on a plate.
Ditto Shot Hotspot and Panoramio.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't that only get you the Urbex name for that location in said pic? (Eg: Fortress, Swoo, etc) You can find that out here by simply asking.kjwx wrote:Social media/reverse image search: Seen a great urbex photo online but have no clue where it's from? Even if the poster doesn't give enough detail for you to find the address with a standard Google search, you can run that image through a reverse image search engine to see what else pops up. Doesn't work everytime but worth a shot.
No, it works much the same as the standard Google 'search by image' function, using identifying features in the photo. Sometimes it's worse than useless but I've located several Melbourne sites this way using IG pix.longnecksmasher wrote:Won't a reverse image search only work if that image is elsewhere on the internet?