A Daily Thing

The chicken explorer

Posted in regular by Sabine on November 22, 2009


Here is a funny thing about me: I am a clean neat-freak.  I love bleach, pine disinfectant, eucalyptus spray (kills 99.9% of germs!).  But show me an abandoned building, a derelict house, architectural neglect and ‘It-a makes-a my heart-a go boom-a ticky boom’ (the Italian captain from ‘Allo allo‘, yes?).

I start to jump up and down, my mind busy with the pictures I could take and thoughts of what could possibly be in there.  Except:

  • These types of places can be dangerous (asbestos, structural weaknesses and collapsing floors).
  • These types of places are patrolled, or very clearly marked as private property.  Did someone say ‘breaking and entering’?  I like my blank criminal record too much.

On occasion I have asked for access – and gotten it (the legal way, yay!), but mostly I have a mental inventory of places around Melbourne and around the world I would kill to have a look at, and probably never will.

Being the chicken that I am, pictures of others’ daring forbidden urban explorations are as close as I will get to certain places, and are often enough to give me a thrilling fix.  I don’t know the name of this person, but I am really grateful he risked his life by walking on (in use!) Parisian métro tracks to the abandoned St Martin stop, closed for the last 40 or 50 years.  Just knowing it exists (not exactly sure where it is though) and that these gorgeous painted ads are still intact makes my day.

Boom-a ticky boom.

(St Martin article originally via Frogsmoke).

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2 Responses

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  1. Jess said, on November 22, 2009 at 5:47 pm

    This reminds me of a book I read recently called “The Mole People: Life in the Tunnels Beneath New York City” – it was all about homeless people taking up residence in disused train tunnels, very interesting!

  2. Métro vandal « A Daily Thing said, on August 20, 2010 at 10:07 pm

    [...] here.  And look at some pretty pictures I posted of the Saint-Martin station (one of the phantoms) here. Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)Memories of Paris: the opposite compassNovember [...]


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