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Urban Exploration, Anyone?
Someone tried it? If so how was it?
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bump bump
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Urban exploration sounds like walking around the city to me.
If you live in NYC, this would be called "life". |
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mmmmm, urbex.
Just last night, I was getting chased by dogs and security.. http://quantum-x.ice.org/photos/Abov...-transit-3.jpg http://quantum-x.ice.org/photos/Abov...S/qx-mps-2.jpg |
cool stuff
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Great stuff I did a little of that when I was younger been a long time though
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I'm an armchair urban explorer. I don't have the balls to blatantly trespass, so I look at websites instead. :winkwink: |
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Arm Chair exploring is great, but actually getting mud up to your.. oh wait. Nah, it's definately a kick. You should moe to Scottland, they don't have trespass laws :D |
I LOVE your pictures quantum-x :thumbsup
where did you take them? |
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I had my gear stolen recently (including a 300D and 33V), so I'm tossing up whether to go "all digital" with a higher end model such as a 20D, or go with a 350D and 33V combo again. Slide film is expensive and time consuming... but unless I get myself a 1Ds there's no way I'll be able to use the full potential of a wide angle lens. Nothing else in the Canon digital range does full frame. I already have a Sigma 12-24mm - or DID have before it was stolen - so I'm hooked on super wide angles. :upsidedow |
Hey. Sounds like you know your cameras.
Having that much gear stolen is heartbreaking, nothing short of it. I know your pain of the 'all digital' or not- I can't live without my wideangle, but shelling out $6k for a body is hard to justify- not in camera terms, but it Other Things You Could Do With That Money terms. I was shooting on Fuji Superia there. I like it. It has a good all round response. I like Reala, too. Velvia etc are lovely, but slide film just shit me completely. 12mm? That's insane :) I want :) I have a 17-40 L, which I spend my life shooting on.. Are you a pro at ____, or is shooting a hobby? Paparazzi- In order- Copper Smelter, South of Sydney, Australia Cranes, Brisbane, Australia Cranes, Brisbane, Australia Storey Bridge, Brisbane, Australia Old Power Tunnels, Brisbane, Australia Bunker, Jebel Ali, Dubai, UEA Underground Cavern / Drain, Manchester, UK Drain, Brisbane Australia (ex) Rail Bridge, Manchester UK Melbourne Power Station, Melbourne, Australia |
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It's about opening your eyes, knowing that you don't have to do what everyone else does.. maintaining that childhood curiosity of 'what's behind / under / over that' |
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amazing and beautiful pics
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I was tossing up getting a 1Ds and/or a new car a few months ago, but then we found out that my wife is pregnant... so she's the one who gets the new car now, and I get my hand slapped if I spend too much on anything. The Sigma 12-24mm is my favourite lens. It's a good daily use lens on the 300D (1.6X crop) but there's definitely a wow factor when you stick it on a full frame body. Just have to be careful not to overdo it with the perspective, check out this distortion when you angle the lens upwards to include some sky: http://www.drebtips.com/digital-rebe...distortion.jpg BTW, I'm not a pro, although I have been claiming some expenses for tax purposes as I do plan to sell prints in the future. It occurred to me that the insurance co may try to get out of paying by claiming I'm using the equipment for commercial purposes. My response? I haven't made one fucking cent from it. :winkwink: |
whoa, those cityscape shots are awesome.
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mm.. lovely.
Wideangle is dope. Check out what PerfectGonzo do - they're shooting on fisheye for smut, and the surfers love it. You're right tho - it's very easy to overuse wideangle.. a 1ds would be sweet.. a 1dsMII would be amazing.. lol What part of oz are you in? Congrats on your wife, too, btw. |
http://media.sensationcontent.com/rowan/boystoys.jpg
This is about as far as I've gone with urbex... they're building a freeway bypass nearby and nothing was signed, or fenced off. :Graucho I stuffed up the framing on that shot slightly, I returned a few times after that but there was never the perfect line up of construction vehicles again. |
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yup! its very cool.. in college we used to explore the tunnels under it, didn't know there was a term of it until a few years ago. also, I hear in paris there are some incredible tunnels |
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Most (excluding about 5) arrondissements in Paris have cavities underneath them. Back in the day when Paris was growing and expanding, people found hte perfect source of their limestone was beneath their feet, and heavily mined it. Naturally, the obvious began to happen, and sections started to sink / cave in. It was so decreed that land owners had to make tunnels under their land, in an attempt to crisscross / swiss cheese the caverns, so the lattice effect would create a stronger reinforcement. This was a sweeping success - and so the quarries were born. In France, there's a massive difference between the Urban explorers and the 'cataphiles' - and in the past, their taste for exploration has ended up in battles, which is slightly amusing. Anyhow - the point is, the Paris underground is vast. I've seen maps that cover an A3 page, with kilometers taking up just a few inches. A friend of mine spent 16 hours walking down there, and barely crossed any. Because of the uniform nature of the tunnels, even with a map, it's super easy to get lost - people have died down there, and as such, the 'quarry police' - a special division of gerdame are assigned to stop people from entering. Despite the vastness of the quarries, there are only a handfull of accessible entry points. Regardless, there a quite a few groups that enjoy being underground - it's not uncommon to walk through the quarries and come across various gatherings and parties - more often than not obvlivious of the other groups; During the war, the Allies and Nazis both had HQs in the quarries, and neither group was the wiser to their opponent's presence. When I was over in Paris, a lot of shit went down about the quarries - if you read french- http://kweks.brisurbex.com/mei/uploa...leparisian.jpg http://kweks.brisurbex.com/mei/uploa...bs24heures.jpg Anyhow. Some of the quarries join into the osseries (or in english, the catacombs), but it's wrong to think that the entirity of the Paris underground is a catacomb. End of lecture ;) |
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I don;t know french, but I think I know what that article is about. a movie theater they found there with a full bar too..
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200m^3 theatre, the latest Bose sound equipment, quality data projecters, 2 open bars, 5 phone lines, running water, toilets, security, the works. Despite the police's kneejerk reaction (TERRORISTS!) - it wasn't / isn't - it was just how my friend had decked the place out to throw nice parties :D |
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that is the coolest shit ever |
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This stuff is amazing. I never really knew this was a "thing".
Anyway, me and my friends did some of this stuff as teens. Went to "peabody's tomb" in glen ellyn, illinois & the "ovaltine factory" in villapark, illinois. Both come up on google with little info, but they were pretty amazing places. Looking back I'm just surprised none of us fell through a rusted stairway or anything. http://www.infiltration.org/ - Great site! I'm thinking of picking up a subscription! |
Quantum those pics are breath taking, the quality is amazing. Fantastic stuff :)
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quantum is my hero, i would love to learn
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Getting utilities connected really isn't as hard as you think. Street lights provide lovely power for the evenings (pop the covers, splice the wires into the trip) - and traffic lights provide great 24/7 power (those squat green boxes on the side of the road) In Australia - the cylindrical 'cans' on the sides of the road are actually mini exchanges. Pop the lock w/ a pair of scissors, use a shifter to undo the bolt, and then connect to a spare rail, and you've got a phone line. (You can also use this to tap into people's phones) There are other ways to get free phone lines too, but anyhow. Water is even easier, it's harder to trace. RE: Getting underground in Paris - I can't hook you up sadly, it took me about 12 months to get contacts. If you hook up with local exploration groups, they might have contacts for you :) For more links, check out - http://www.sub-urban.com/ Just as an aside - http://www.sub-urban.com/ballroom.htm has to be one of THE best locations and reads I've ever come across. Just check it out. Amazing. |
It's amazing how many times you do things, then later learn more and go.. oh.. fuck.
I slipped over in a drain in high tide, lost all my gear, torch and spare clothes under water, got sucked in the current. Some panicky moments there. Absieling from a bridge, and having to drop 2m to start the abseil - hoping like fuck your ropes are secure. If you're into abseiling- 50m across, lip to lip. 12m internal diameter 100m down Very, Very big rush. It was great. I did it at 3AM also, on a freezing winter night. What a place. http://www.siologen.net/pbase/albums...siolocc008.JPG http://quantum-x.ice.org/photos/Pano...qx-geehi-7.jpg http://quantum-x.ice.org/photos/Pano...qx-geehi-6.jpg http://quantum-x.ice.org/photos/Pano...qx-geehi-1.jpg |
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