63 Chilling Photos Of Abandoned Places

By | November 28, 2022

Six Flags Jazzland in New Orleans, Louisiana. The park was severely damaged by Hurricane Katrina has been abandoned ever since. 

Get ready for some rotting, decaying, dilapidated structures that scream safety concerns. Yes, we have 63 photos of abandoned buildings from all over the world, that we are pretty darn sure are haunted. Let's dive into some ultra-creepy amusement parks that have been closed for decades and are now filled with the silent screams of kids that have long departed. Or the crumbling remnants of once glorious hotels that are now inhabited by rats and other types of vermin. We'll also journey to empty sports stadiums that have been left to rot; long after the last victory lap has been run. Also, see what's left of an Austrian nightclub after it was ravaged by a fire. Yes, basically, we have 63 locations that would make for a courageous urban explorer's dream. One thing that wont be abandoned is this photo gallery - because these images are fascinating. Onward! 

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Source: Reddit

This photo looks like a scene out of the TV series, American Horror Story. This amusement park opened in 2000, and was originally known as Jazzland. It was located on a low-lying section of Eastern Orleans. Then Hurricane Katrina happened. The entire amusement park was flooded and left to rot beneath 4 to 7 feet of flood water for over a month. Repair costs were much too high so the park has been abandoned since August 2005. No amusement here; the park now consists of rusting structures, broken attractions, rotting asbestos, and a steady influx of dangerous wildlife. Needless to say, a day trip to this abandoned amusement park is a major health risk.

Precariously perched on a rock pillar in the Westman Islands of Iceland, the Prídrangaviti Lighthouse is arguably the most isolated lighthouse in the world.

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Source: Reddit

Talk about the most loneliest lighthouse in the world. You almost want to give the Prídrangaviti Lighthouse in the Westman Islands of Iceland a hug. This Icelandic lighthouse was built in 1938, right before the onset of World War II. And by no means was building a remote Icelandic lighthouse an easy task. Construction workers had to scale the cliff to reach where to lay the lighthouse groundwork. What else did they face? Slick rocks, rain, and heavy winds - leaving the workers safe in the knowledge that one misstep would land them in the icy-cold North Atlantic Ocean that rages below. Now-a-days, workers can take a helicopter for needed repairs.