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-   -   Photo thread: Quantum-X infiltrates NASA. (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=719309)

quantum-x 03-29-2007 11:40 AM

Photo thread: Quantum-X infiltrates NASA.
 
Finally able to release the details and photos on this one for your reading enjoyment...

Long Story & photos >
****** NASA | 2007

****** has been left to sink into distant memory and the swamps that surround it. Even today, nature is regaining its dominance.
Trees have staked their claim on rooftops and a tumble of weeds encroach the tarmac.

What was a rocket and aerospace research and testing facility is now totally abandoned. Fifty miles from ******, with only one gate and some distance between itself and the real world, there is no doubt it has been totally forgotten until recently.

One mile's walk down the abandoned tarmac strip, the main facility lies to the left, comprised of approximately 10 buildings. To the unlucky or oblivious explorer, this facility is the highlight of the journey - but they would be mistaken.

Three miles south, and half a mile east lies a shed, modest in proportion compared to its friends up the road. It's also a much lighter construction, and has really suffered the elements. Half the roof is missing. All the windows are smashed. The corrugated tin walls fail to keep out the elements, and as a result, you could be forgiven for overlooking the rusted metal floor.

But if you walk over the floor, you'd notice that the aging metal would bow beneath your feet, and would trigger a deep echo, betraying the huge void below. Void is technically incorrect - there's a lot of empty space, granted, but there's also one (debatably two) NASA rockets.

dsankt and I had come prepared for our trip into space - the trip to the facility and silo below is not an easy one. After four miles of walking in cold and rain, our preparation was hanging heavy on our backs - the utopian idea of 'We'll take skateboards' had been aborted 15 meters after its execution - I can't skateboard, and the road had conveniently truck-sized holes in it.

Two miles into our walk, our destination still lingering on the horizon, and our car and equal distance behind us, we stopped dead in our tracks. Ahead was the hazy outline of a white van, driving slowly towards us. This was a dead end road, and we'd passed two locked gates. With no cover on a dead straight road, we couldn't run or hide. Our future thoughts of travelling to the US began to fade. We confirmed our only plausible excuse: we were geocaching. I set a cache mark on my GPS, and we waited for the car to approach. Tinted windows prevented us from seeing the occupant until it was on top of us. The driver cast us an unconcerned glance. Two seconds passed. I attempted the Australian Defusing Greeting Maneuver. I nodded in his direction. Two seconds passed. Without shifting his gaze at the road behind us, he lifted a finger off the steering wheel, completing the salutation. He continued driving, and we continued walking.

When the facility was originally abandoned, the staff seemed to employ an approach of 'security through isolation' - all attempts to lock up buildings had since rusted or were so half-assed you could step over them.

One thing they hadn't overlooked, however, was the sealing of the silo, despite the fact the execution still fits in the 'half assed' category - a patchwork quilt of mesh, steel plates and amateur welding technique. Explorers previous to us had hack sawed a small 2'x1' rectangle out of the middle of the silo cap.

We dropped a piece of glass down the hole. Seven seconds went by, and a distant thunk-splash sound boomed back, amplified by the shape of the silo. We exchanged a glance, and then headed towards our backpacks. We'd prepared for this.

Ten minutes went past, and our tinfoil space suits were ready. dsankt looked like subzero from Mortal Combat, and I unfortunately looked like I was wearing a reflective nappy. Functionality over fashion.

http://www.ninjito.com/dump/2007-01-25/qx-door-4.jpg
Deluxe version spacesuits. Michelin man suits are for fat people.

Now in the appropriate attire, we began to rig our ropes for our SRT descent into the silo. Finding a solid anchor in urbex locations can prove to be challenging, due to the often less-than-perfect state of the surroundings. There are a number of factors to consider, most obviously structural integrity, but also rope protection, and more importantly, contingency. If our gear failed while we were inside the silo, the choice would lie between dying from hunger, dying from a plummet, or dying from being consumed by a hungry friend choosing to delay dying by hunger.

Having established our rig from 2' RSJ, with a safety on a 1' beam, rope protection in place and gear double checked, dsankt harnessed up and began to squeeze himself into the tiny rusted hole in the floor. Finally clear, he glided into the darkness for about 5 meters, swung onto a staircase and secured the lower part of our rig. I began passing down our gear, and eventually harnessed up for my descent.

One of the more challenging and exciting aspects about urbex SRT is the non-standard situations you find yourself in - for example, attempting to shove yourself through a hole too small for you, while trying to feed rope and maintain control of your descender, so when eventually clear of the hole you don't plummet. Once safely upon the stairs, we had some time to marvel at where we were.

http://www.ninjito.com/dump/2007-01-25/qx-door-1.jpg
The upper rocket, as shot on the first floor.

In front of us, was a huge concrete cylinder. It didn't have the form that immediately suggested a rocket, but was incredibly impressive regardless. At 10' intervals around the silo huge anchors protruded from the walls, and the pattern repeated vertically, each floor with its own set of anchors and extinct lighting fixtures. We began the descent down the spiral staircases. Eight floors down we hit a floor, the bottom of the first rocket. The mesh floor, dangerously past its expiry date was warped and rusted. Jagged holes and deep protrusions leered at strange angles, twisted from the debris hurriedly hurled into the silo when the workers were leaving. We made our way to the far side of the silo and shone our torches upwards - and there it was - N A S A.

http://www.ninjito.com/dump/2007-01-25/qx-door-3.jpg
N A S A BABY

We picked our way back to the staircases, and made our way down further. Another rocket, another huge void. We went down as far as we could, but eventually came to water - the bottom of the silo disappeared into murky water of indeterminable depths, the shadows of lightshades and anchors barely visible.

http://www.ninjito.com/dump/2007-01-25/qx-door-2.jpg
The rocket and the staircases.

From here, we explored and took photographs for the best part of a few hours. The humidity was terrible. We sweated. Jackets and jumpers came off, but we sweated still. Our cameras fogged, the distant light above faded to a deep purple, and then black. Eventually, 4 hours later, after rigging back onto our lifeline and swinging out over the void, ascending hand over hand until I reached the gagged hole, I was back above ground. Exhausted, we hauled our gear back up, and an equally tired and dirty dsankt wrestled with the awkwardness of the exit.

I can't really remember packing up our gear or obscuring the entrance, or the details of the 4.5 mile walk back to the car.. The hour and a half walk was punctuated with periodic meanderings off the road as a result from walking with eyes closed, and with the stark contrast of the naked branches of winter trees dark across the burnt sky of ******, fading to the deep purple above.

You could almost imagine what it would have been like, years prior, to watch the building slowly roll away from the silo, the doors to open, the anchors shackled to the rocket, and the resulting inferno billowing up into the sky.

quantum-x / dsankt 2007 - shouts to ****** for his original work on this location, and to all those that knew and kept it quiet to preserve the location.

quantum-x 03-29-2007 11:41 AM

Additional random photos of late--

http://www.stupidfuckingpictures.com/qxterminal1.jpg

Lord Aga 03-29-2007 11:52 AM

Awesome stuff mate :)

psili 03-29-2007 11:53 AM

Bad ass pictures and story, man.

RuthB 03-29-2007 11:58 AM

that looks and sounds like quite the adventure! :thumbsup

dsankt 03-29-2007 12:04 PM

2nd shot is off the charts son. I came.

wdsguy 03-29-2007 12:53 PM

nice pics as always.

woj 03-29-2007 01:00 PM

awesome pics as usual man :thumbsup

germ 03-29-2007 01:08 PM

i love your photographic exploits :thumbsup

quantum-x 03-29-2007 10:12 PM

morning bump of goodness glory

Mutt 03-29-2007 10:25 PM

always amazing shit from you guys. are there any TV programs about this 'hobby'? if not, you should produce it.

who does the writing? it's as good as the photos.

SmokeyTheBear 03-29-2007 10:25 PM

wow awesome. i overlooked this thread twice. glad i finally clicked it.

seeric 03-29-2007 10:28 PM

Oh Man That Third Pic With The Staircases Is

Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!!!!!!!! !!

quantum-x 03-29-2007 11:10 PM

Thanks for the comments guys - glad you made it past the huge chunk of text. Makes for a sigwhore free thread I guess ;)

I did the writeup for this one, dsankt is doing a writeup for his side of the story at the moment. He's got more of a handle on words (and himself)

Mutt - there are a few TV programs that make it out, but sadly the media have a habit of religiously fucking up any reports or features on 'urban exploration'. They generally trip up on the motives [suddenly we're all criminals / nolife losers / graffitiers] or worse yet the content. There are a few cases where reporters were asking some explorers to 'sex up' their footage by upping the danger level etc. You can understand it from a producer's point of view - but sadly such arrangements almost always hit the mark - kinda like adult webmasters and media.

That said, the only reason we're releasing these photographs is because video footage of this place is going to making itself into a documentary, so there's not much point hiding it anymore :D

I did have some footage from the niagara tunnels that one of the guys shot as we were going in, which weas pretty decent.. I'll try to dig it up!

crockett 03-29-2007 11:24 PM

Cool pics as always. I assume this isn't Nasa Florida. Would be great if you would put all these pics on a webpage somewhere.

tony286 03-29-2007 11:28 PM

some very nice pictures

OzMan 03-29-2007 11:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mutt (Post 12168141)
always amazing shit from you guys. are there any TV programs about this 'hobby'? if not, you should produce it.

who does the writing? it's as good as the photos.

what he said

I think you should make this your "full time" hobby :thumbsup

LiveDose 03-30-2007 12:04 AM

Rock on. That stuff is amazing...

quantum-x 03-30-2007 12:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by crockett (Post 12168314)
Cool pics as always. I assume this isn't Nasa Florida. Would be great if you would put all these pics on a webpage somewhere.

Just chatted w/ Crockett on ICQ. For anyone curious - it's in the neighbourhood, but not where you'd expect ;)

Bdiddy 03-30-2007 12:28 AM

nice report....you should show some more pics :)

OzMan 03-30-2007 12:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by quantum-x (Post 12168458)
Just chatted w/ Crockett on ICQ. For anyone curious - it's in the neighbourhood, but not where you'd expect ;)

damn you..I just spent the last 20 minutes looking for the location but I was looking in Australia for some reason :Oh crap :1orglaugh

quantum-x 03-30-2007 08:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bdiddy (Post 12168476)
nice report....you should show some more pics :)

Did I mention the entire place was without light, the floor was fucked, the bottom was flooded and full of ouchies, the temperature was off the scale and the humidity was insane? Each photo took about 10 - 15 minutes to shoot (let alone frame and plan), and the lenses were constantly fogging :)

I got 4 photos that I'm happy with, which is better than 20 shit ones :2 cents:

OzMan: Australia? haha.. the photo on my second post is in AU though ;)

crockett 03-30-2007 10:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by quantum-x (Post 12168458)
Just chatted w/ Crockett on ICQ. For anyone curious - it's in the neighbourhood, but not where you'd expect ;)

Yep good chat.. and bump for your pics.


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