I know i typically dont blog about cars, partly for the fact that i firstly cant drive and secondly i never really understood cars but this just astounds me, by the time i have finished writing this and post it over 39 thousand cars will have been produced in this year alone, and it continues to rise every second .but where do they all go? what if nobody buys them?
well this is what happens
Kent,UK
thousands of cars abandoned forevernever to be used and this isnt the only place with these mass graves of cars
USA
another place that falls victim this is just one of the many car graveyards in the usa
as the usa contains 4.9% of the total world production of cars
St Petersburg,Russia
Imported European cars fail to sell and wind up left to rust in an airport.
When supply exceeds demand, you're left with a surplus. Post-recession, families aren't running out and purchasing a new car each year. so Why should we produce so much and leave the remnants of which filling up abandoned lots around the world.
this leads to the question of why? why aren't these cars given to people in need, sold for parts etc. in 2011 59,929,016 cars were produced in the world in comparison to 39,759,847 in 1999, i believe this issue needs to be resolved as the places in these images are just a small selection of the bigger problem places like these exist all over the world, and for what? to be left for waste?
Saturday, 26 July 2014
Tuesday, 11 March 2014
Kowloon - The Walled City Facts
KOWLOON: The Walled City
Kowloon Walled city has always been a bit of an anomaly for me it seemed like a modern dystopia inspiring settings for the anime Ghost In A Shell as well as many other shows and movies,I find it fascinating that China and Britain were against taking responsibility for what had become of this place.
Kowloon Walled City was a densely populated, largely ungoverned settlement in New Kowloon, Hong Kong. Originally a Chinese military fort, the Walled City became an enclave after the New Territories were leased toBritain in 1898. Its population increased dramatically following the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong during World War II. In 1987, the Walled City contained 33,000 residents within its 2.6-hectare (0.010 sq mi) borders. From the 1950s to the 1970s, it was controlled by Triads and had high rates of prostitution, gambling, and drug use.
KWC inhabitants were often criminals, refugees, and drug addicts who for one reason or another could not find work outside the city, or who had reason to fear the authorities. Other people were there because they grew up there, since their parents lived there.
In January 1987, the Hong Kong government announced plans to demolish the Walled City. After an arduous eviction process, demolition began in March 1993 and was completed in April 1994. Kowloon Walled City Park opened in December 1995 and occupies the area of the former Walled City. Some historical artefacts from the Walled City, including its yamen building and remnants of its South Gate, have been preserved there.
on reddit an ama is also present about kowloon though the person in question was very young during their time in kowloon a lot of useful information can be found in this subreddit
and many documentaries have been made about this place
this one i found best represents the place and the people living within the walls
english subtitled
Monday, 10 March 2014
Abandonedthemeparks- how abandoned?
so for now heres some of my favourites.
Pripyat
Pripyat Amusement Park in Ukraine was due to be opened on May 1st 1986 in time for the May Day celebrations but due to the Chernobyl disaster occurring only a few kilometres away this plan was derailed.
The park was opened for a couple of hours on April 27 to keep the city people entertained before the announcement to evacuate the city was made.
why: the thoughts of the ignorance of the people after the chernobyl disaster fascinates me, they had no idea how much harm the use of these rides had caused and opened before the evacuation
Wonderland
In Chenzhuang Village, China, about 20 miles northwest of central Beijing, the ruins of a partially built amusement park called Wonderland sit near a highway,Construction work at the park, which developers had promised would be "the largest amusement park in Asia," stopped around 1998 after disagreements with the local government and farmers over property prices. Developers briefly tried to restart construction in 2008, but without success.
According to the local government, the Wonderland site will become a 228,000-square-meter entertainment city with five-star hotels and an indoor theme park, which will be built on the eastern side of the shopping complex.
why: it looked like it would have been an amazing place and has a very rustic- disneyesque feel to it,
its a shame how it had been looked over.
its a shame how it had been looked over.
Nara Dreamland (yet another disney knock off)
why:this place was disney BEFORE disney came along and built a park its now a mere shadow of its former self in its hay day it would have been very popular but now, it just lays in waste giving everyone a very apocaliptic feel.
Six-Flags New Orleans
Six Flags New Orleans, also abbreviated to SFNO, is an abandoned theme park in New Orleans, Louisiana that has been closed since just before Hurricane Katrina struck in August 2005 and is currently owned by the city of New Orleans. Six Flags had previously owned the park since March 2002, but after assessing the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina and the related exorbitant expenses of repairing the damage, sought to terminate their 75-year lease with the city, beginning in July 2006 and finally succeeding in September 2009. The park is located in Eastern New Orleans, in the Ninth Ward of the city, off Interstate 10. Despite various announced plans to redevelop the site, as of 2014, it is still an abandoned amusement park in extremely poor condition. It is a well-known urban exploration destination.
why:its modern enough that everyone still recognises the rides, looking at them in their state of disrepair can make you imagine its former glory and i really want to go on these rides
Gulliver’s Kingdom, Japan
why: just look at it its so eerie ,theres not a whole lot you can say about it though, a large dead looking giant staring into the sky
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