Top floor restroom inside the collapsing Walker Building at Central State Hospital.
Photo: "Two-Toned"
Central State Hospital is the oldest psychiatric facility in the state of Georgia, admitting its first patient in 1842. This building, the Walker Building, wasn't constructed until 1884, but remained in operation for almost a century. Today, much of the top floor of the building has experienced severe damage due to the humid, wet conditions of the area.
Photo: Nature's Gobo
Daylight seeps through the front doors of the Mare Island Naval Shipyard Administration Building, built in 1870, creating beautiful patterns on the wall.
(Print - http://smu.gs/1bbkQA0 )Photo: "Storage Room"
Photo: "Streetlight Cures"
Light from a streetlamp, just before dawn, seeps into a patient room at the Mont Alto Sanatorium in Pennsylvania.
The roots of the sanatorium began in 1901 with one shack in the mountains of Pennsylvania. This building, Unit 2, was constructed in 1938 and designed as a Children's Preventorium, to treat tuberculosis.
Photo: "A Dreamer's Paintbrush"
We've had two really incredible sunsets in the Bay Area within the last week. This shot of San Francisco's Sutro Tower and Twin Peaks was taken last Tuesday from Alameda.
Photo: "Light Inside"
I had the opportunity last week to make a return trip to the beautiful St. Joseph's Church in San Francisco.
In 1906, an earthquake and fire destroyed this building. It was reconstructed in 1913 and remained in operation until the 1989 quake when it was deemed structurally unsound. The church has been vacant since.
(Print - http://smu.gs/16K169Z )
Photo: "Endless Curves"
Inside the reactor building at an unfinished nuclear power plant in Tennessee.
(Print - http://smu.gs/GBrjKY)
Photo: "Barber Shop"
This large 1940's era building connects with the original 1800's Administration Building and is significant in its architecture as it was the most successful 'modern' building on the base.
(Print - http://smu.gs/1eMHtjJ )Photo: "Sorter"
Here's another image from the former coal breaker near Manahoy City, Pennsylvania.
These sorters were located near the top of the facility and helped pick through the coal to weed out the unusable materials.
This coal breaker opened in 1932 and is currently being demolished after being closed for 50 years. Sad to see her go.
(Print - http://smu.gs/1eHe8XU)
Photo: "A Life Lost"
Unfortunately, today's image comes with a sad story of a history lost. The Saint Nicholas coal breaker, just outside of Manahoy City, Pennsylvania, is undergoing demolition as I write this post.
The plant opened in 1932, but to begin construction in 1930, half of the village of Suffolk had to be relocated to make room for the massive facility. The construction process included laying 20 miles of railroad track, 1.5 miles of conveyor and 118 miles of wire and cable.
The Saint Nicholas breakers were the largest coal facilities in the world and at the time this was the second largest plant in the world. The factory was constructed with 2 separate sides that are able to operate independently and produced a combined volume of 12,500 tons of coal per day.
This plant closed since 1963.
Photo: "The Lost World"
This former base was used by the Army Reserve from 1911 until it closed in 1995.
During the first few years of operation, the main goal of the base was to use hydraulic suction dredges to widen and deepen the California River Delta sections to make for easier transport.
I Miss These Places
Since TheSouthern1800 trip to a few Southern states in May, I haven't explored too many abandoned buildings. I miss the asylums and hospitals, waking up at 3am to be in the buildings for blue hour and dawn, the hours spent in the car listening to music and getting to know your travel companions.
A few weeks ago, some of that longing was fulfilled when a friend invited me to this old shipyard to photograph a few of the buildings I hadn't yet explored.
This is an old military barrack at the former Mare Island Naval Shipyard, which housed around 100 military personnel when the base was in operation from the late 1800's to the late 1990's.
Around California, most of the abandoned historical locations once belonged to the military. Land is so expensive here that when most things become abandoned, they are torn down and replaced by something new. The old shipyard and military bases are typically the longest standing abandonments in the area.
(Print - http://smu.gs/19oemvJ )
Photo: "Natural Draft Tower"
The concept of a cooling tower is to reject heat by cooling water in an evaporative manner. The heat from the water transferred to the air raises the temperature of the air and increases the humidity and that air is released into the atmosphere.
Cooling towers are very effective at the disposal of heat, more so than dry devices, as water can cool much faster than other methods. This natural draft cooling tower relied on the buoyancy of the heated air to provide the draft up the tower and was incredibly efficient as it cooled water by the thousands of gallons.
'Women In Photography' Panelist
This afternoon, I'm heading down to Google to be a panelist on the 'Women In Photography' Hangout hosted by +Laurie Rubin. I'll be a guest amongst some other talented female photographers; +Alexis Coram, +piper mackay and +Jessica Ambats. It begins at 6pm PST and can be viewed via the link below!
Hangout Link: http://bit.ly/1e6QhAu