Wow, I was really scared for you both being in that house. When he sat on the couch ,I gasped in fear that the floor would collapse . I love your videos. I know you both are careful but please don't scare me like that okay 😊
As long as this video is already up on RU-vid, they are all secure. I assume that nothing awful is actually happening to them, even if I'm just about to start playing it. I suppose this video won't be posted on RU-vid if something were to happen to them in that house.
The light blue car is a 1985 Oldsmobile Delta 88 Royale Brougham. If this property was abandoned in 2002 I was driving a red metallic 1984 Delta 88 Royale very similar to this to high school at the time. Also if this was all abandoned in 2002 the LeSabre was 10 years old at the very most. You guys are awesome
Wasn't an Indian family, other explorers have gotten the scoop on this place. It was an Italian family that purchased the home from a woman in the late 90s who lived here for about 6 years but had to move due to it not being wheelchair accessible. She mentioned the front doors were changed, but all the remaining light fixtures and ceiling fans were original. Sad to see that chimney finally collapsed and took half the living room with it. It may have been able to be salvaged before that major collapse. Now though.... I think she's way too far gone. Sad, this home was beautiful in its day. Would love to see pictures of it before it fell into complete disrepair.
@Derek-tk4wf no, that person moved and sold it to an Italian family. The Italians abandoned it. Also might be hard to have a yard sale in the middle of the woods lol.
Do you think the entire family were wiped out in some type of accident? You'd think relatives or friends would have tried to salvage most of the stuff that was left behind. I get the sense there's a sad story why it's abandoned
The coolest place I ever explored was this house that was abandoned in 1979 they left everything behind including old copies of mad magazine and all sorts of comic books
Retrieve the VIN#'s on those 3 vehicles & run them through Beenverified or run a CARFAX. It might give you actual info of when they were actually last running, origin of purchase etc.
Coolest place i ever explored was back in 1996-97. It was a 2 room cabin built in the woods off the state hwy. It was rotting away, vines growing inside etc but the cool part was UP IN THE SMALL EXPOSED ATTIC WAS A NEWSPAPER OF THE TITANIC DISASTER. Fast forward to now...there's been a Home Depot built nearby for over 20yrs & the wetland cabin is long gone.
Wow! This is bad. Wasn't like this in the last video I saw of this place. The chimney was coming loose off the outside wall. My guess is that the chimney collapsed and look the wall with it. Floor was intact. Agree that this house won't be up for much longer. Hoping you guys are enjoying your trip here. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I'd suggest for someone to take this vintage television and vcr. They can still be salvaged, if exposure to the elements didn't compromise the circuitry. Personally, I would like to get this 2000 new year party hat, it's very cool. It's a must have addition to any urban exploration host! Please save things before they get lost, at this stage, it's not really theft.
Yes partly, but keep in mind, if 1 roof leak started anywhere in the house it will accelerate the decay exponentially. And all the trees around the house give the impression the house didn't see much sun, which then again let's the wood sit and rot. The elements from the woods around the house also make it accelerate. I have a house in the Poconos deep in the woods and it needs 5x the repairs my main home needs in long Island. Then again, this home is brick, and they are essentially bulletproof. 23 years abandoned with no maintenance whatsoever will do that to any house... if not worse
@@nicksterr208623 years wouldnt even get close to this. Like someone said the last video about this house from someone else it was perfectly fine except the chimney was falling off. I think the chimney fell and took the wall and floor out. Now it will rapidly decay though and just fall in on itself
@@septemberg.287 Those speakers are easy to spot because of their 12" white woofer cones. They weigh 55 lbs each. I bought mine new in 1974 and just had them completely restored with modern crossovers
@@robertthomas3364 I've had my stereo since 74 as well the best sound ever.. But do you have to get permission to go to these places? I want to explore
@user-oe2us2ly9u I couldn't see through the woofers. I saw a glimpse in the video of another part of the speaker, the midrange, it had a silver ring around it like mine do. Those cost $500 a pair back in 1974
If that house was only abandoned in or around 2000, then it is a 1990s time-capsule. I've certainly seen older ruins, going back 60 or 70 years, but only in the UK, or places where house-building techniques were far, far older and could withstand the test of time. As well, as an answer to a thought in your last video (the neighborhood being destroyed-I watched it all), I can assure you that there is PLENTY to see in Mexico. It's not just some name on a map (used as an epithet by so many, unfortunately, but not that I heard it done that way on this channel). Mexico holds far older gems than large segments of Canada and the U.S., except for Native/First Nations ruins that survived the European onslaught. Good stuff. Good channel. I 'm sorry it took me so long to find. -- Glennie in Vermont
@@nicksterr2086 Just a cultural lack of respect for the integrity of properties and the entitlement of the persons behind destruction. It's sad, but it's deeply ingrained in our societies since Antiquity. I detest it and I wish we all had respect for objects in the same way the Japanese in general do...
@Polemodrome I agree, although not all of us are like this. Unfortunately, most of the time, it's teens. I'll never understand why, though. What satisfaction can you possibly get from destroying someone's property for no reason. Abandoned or not
@@nicksterr2086 You are right, they're mostly teens. But it's not done without reason. In fact, it can have variety of motivations: a transgressive form of expression to cope with frustration, boredom due to a lack of excitement in daily life, transformative art statement based on appropriation (to tell "I was here" or anything else)... Vandalism is more complex of a phenomenon than we think. It is fascinating to study, even. A lot of respectful people probably did an act of benign vandalism or two in their lives, you know... As writing graffiti on their school desk, or something...
@@murphsmodels8853no what happened was they had a huge brick fireplace in the living room, I mean huge, and it was letting in water, which seeped and rotted the living room floor. So when the brick fireplace collapsed in, the floor was already rotted and the weight made it collapse
As I said on another comment section, mansions are characterized by their surface area of 7K square feet and more. The term lost its historical sense, because there are no longer any medieval fortresses regularly converted into residential châteaux. I saw the comment thread of a rather pedantic guy who defined all mansions by the presence of a ballroom. It is a half truth only applying to Gilded age mansions. It doesn't stand true to all-time mansions in general.
I think maybe some one maybe passed away And the rest of the family moved back to their home land The photo you shared looked like she was oriental And yes it's a shame no one else took the house to live in And the one thing you shared was a manor spreader Great video guys Fireman 🔥🔥🔥
I remembered seeing this on another explore. It was 2 years ago and in better condition. The living room floor was still in tact. In 1999 I was 30 years old. Doesn’t seem that long ago. You weren't even born yet!!! 😮😂😊
That house was very sketchy. If you would’ve fallen, I think you would’ve been impaled😮 Happy you made it out in one piece. Thanks for the look back in time❤
Seeing places like this just makes me feel so sad. An entire family's life just left behind to rot. Looks like it was such a beautiful home at one time. What a waste
That bow rider boat was made by Glastron, I wish you'd walked behind it to see if it was a jet-drive - they made several different models of them back in the day. They are still making boats, but the terrible gas milage of the jet-drives made a big "slump" in sales when gas prices left the .40 cents per gallon price back in the seventies.
Its crazy how fast modern homes fall apart when people leave them. When the climate controls stop working and the hot/cold cycles start hitting the house, windows will crack then break and thats when water starts getting in, and it rapidly falls apart.
This house makes me feel old. I was born in late 1992 and there is stuff from 2000 in this house, meaning it was still occupied until I was at least 7 years old. That means I have childhood memories that took place at the same time that people were living in this house (hundreds of miles away). And yet its collapsing from damage from the elements. My childhood home, though much smaller and less lavish, was a very similar story... 1970s built, in the middle of the woods, not the best construction quality... we moved out in February 2001 and by the time it was torn down in August 2018, the floor in the living room was collapsing and the ceiling was coming down... it was starting to rapidly decay. One of the pieces of ceiling came down right over the very spot where I used to play PlayStation 1 in the living room. In 2024 it probably would be in fairly similar shape to this one. June 10, 2024 3:07 am
I wonder if the foundation was bad even though someone said the lady the last family bought it from went to a nursing home due to accessibility issues.
When people leave like that its government or drug cartels its not like they say lets lev all our photos. New identity the whole family is going to get so of course they're going to leave pictures and all their past life cuz they're in protective custody due to something that's what I'm thinking
My birthday is October 14 It’s not long ago for me but I’m a lot older. Beautiful home, especially to be out in the country. I love the white furniture, no children? Can’t fathom why they just left or removed?
@Stringer media It was a cool find and y'all had a lot of fun. The trailer wasn't a trailer but a ( manure spreader) I think that you're exploring and you're curious especially about whom these people were ? But you passed the BIG pile of bill's under the New years hat. In that stack of papers were lots of clues to who they were. Also maybe the glove box of the car's as well. Maybe license and registration insurance documents and so on. But it was fun hanging out with you 2 and watching you guess at stuff. It was in terrible shape for a house as young as it was. I'm thinking it was built in the 80s or very late 70s. My neighbor just up and left her house in February of 2020. With a new roof and steps to the front door brand new lawn mower and snow blower in the garage. It's been all locked up and I've not heard anything from her since Christmas 2020. 😵💫 I don't know what to think about that. My neighbor don't know who she was or who lived there before this woman did??? 😵💫😵💫
Raddy, ddy, thank you this channel, weather lk brighter, cooler, windy and quiet location, scenery lk wonderful, find this location is largerst landyards, lk like forest location, is abandoned left behind, this vehicle can being service is lk great amazing, if know to send service at vehicle shop, seen all items left behind, may know, teams renggers explore where is this location, how long is this happen, this channel is great amazing, thank you to update this, bless with staysafe, stayhealth, take care, be careful where ever teams renggers explores enter any location. Good luck.
Did you guys think about finding some mail or something that showed the address and possibly researching who lived there and where they might have moved to or the circumstances of why they left the house to rot?
From watching many channels from this genre-- abandoned property exploration, it seems foreigners are more likely to leave in a hurry leaving everything behind. They make their money and go back to their home country, leaving these messes behind.
that farm machenery thing is a manure spreader for getting rid of the manuer. back in the70 we used one to spread the animal crap on our fields fr fertilizer
I love that you guys do this because it's very informative and interesting, but maybe lay off the "OLD" commentary. I was born in '85 and sweet jesus you guys make me feel like I should be in a museum. Also, maybe bring someone a little older so you can identify things like VHS tapes and not sound silly when you can't figure out what certain things are. Your video about the abandoned penthouse drove me nuts because you kept identifying apartment storage spaces as dog kennels because of the fencing used.
Honestly I wouldnt be stepping into the house with the colasped floor, the roof has been leaking and its most likely the rest of the floor is not in good shape.
I had a thought that a bolder went through that living room or like a smashing ball? I'm probably wrong but it gives me that vibe with the wall and the floor
This is one of your last explores? 😥☹️ that’s sad, I really enjoy your vids. Although I know it can probably be difficult to gain an audience, and have $ and time to travel to these locations, and you’ve been at it for a long time. I can only imagine the things you’ve seen, it intrigues me so much to see the past, but see it in the “future”. I wonder about all these families. I like your overall vibe, and not much extra talking and over hyping stuff up like a lot of creators. It’s actually really cool to just see the places. It actually makes me want to explore places in my area, but I’m too scared to. I got to take a tour of the grand central terminal in Buffalo, NY. It’s the old main train station that was used when train was a big way of transport, and actually is a huge reason why Buffalo is even on the map at all as a city. It’s been abandoned for many years, and has a super cool backstory. The main floor was cheaply renovated a few years ago for a movie set. We got to tour all the way up to the top, and in the basement. It was so so cool, and the decay is intense! It’s still abandoned, they do use the bottom floor for some events now.
It's probably best to wear gloves when touching all those mold-covered items. Y'all should probably get a hold of some respirators for these kinds of places. I can only imagine what you must be breathing in. I'm ultimately hoping to interview people for my Dissertation chapter on Liminal Spaces. Your channel's perfect.
Do you have to get permission to go inside these places? I want to start exploring but don't want to end up in jail for trespassing or something.. And where do you find all the houses????
Imagine having too bunker down in a zombie apocolyps like an injury and the government driving not many miles away too prevent any survivors or something, and having too renovate the land or house with what is avaible, like a "Survivor man" spinoff, heh 😮