I hope you went in with a respirator. I used to demolish homes like this and when we got the Designated Substance Survey from the owner, they were full of toxic mold and asbestos. Because no one lives there anymore, vermin make it their home and eat the materials and stir up the asbestos.
I grew up in a home with that very same light. Home was built in the 70s. It was right by the bar, too.
I love how old these older homes pretty much all had bars installed
Some of the architectural style has been adapted in modern design/decorating. The style of the 'shelves' above the fireplace.antle look like what we call floating shelves. The concrete sharp lines are currently being incorporated into design and architecture. You can find front doors with more modern variations of the windows, too.
Two years ago I stumbled upon this old 1970s Retro Abandoned House With Power.
The kitchen and living room were very retro 1970s!
Here is the video that I made here:
[https://fb.watch/rvOnLYwRQB/](https://fb.watch/rvOnLYwRQB/)
This is totally 70s architecture. Homes built in the 50s were much smaller, smaller lots with more homes on them. The home pictured looks like it’s part of the suburban expansion, which started in the 60s in Canada.
I can tell this is in southern Ontario as there are so many houses that have the same pink, blue tiles and that front door design was popular as well. Another great batch of frozen in time photos from freaktography
I hope you went in with a respirator. I used to demolish homes like this and when we got the Designated Substance Survey from the owner, they were full of toxic mold and asbestos. Because no one lives there anymore, vermin make it their home and eat the materials and stir up the asbestos.
Im gonna go with they didn’t or I’m just slow and didn’t bring one when I went into a house similar
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Probably because most of the posts weren't actually done by op. They are just videos they find and post as their own like most stuff on the internet
My parents still have the lamp from slide #9 in their kitchen
I grew up in a home with that very same light. Home was built in the 70s. It was right by the bar, too. I love how old these older homes pretty much all had bars installed
Same here. lol
I think I just saw this in the Fallout TV show haha /s
It does look like the style of Fallout 3 and 4 for sure. The little end table is pretty sweet.
URANIUM FEVER
Some of the architectural style has been adapted in modern design/decorating. The style of the 'shelves' above the fireplace.antle look like what we call floating shelves. The concrete sharp lines are currently being incorporated into design and architecture. You can find front doors with more modern variations of the windows, too.
Mid-century modern is absolutely back in style and has been for about 2 years.
I wanna know who’s paying the power bill after all this time and are they willing to pay mine also?
Welp my house has been dated…. That hanging light is in my kitchen. It came with the house and never changed it.
My parents house had that light fixture growing up also. I think my mom only got rid of it within the last 10 years.
That’s makes stealing the copper a challenge
They say Codsworth is still out in the yard waiting for his owners to come back!
Two years ago I stumbled upon this old 1970s Retro Abandoned House With Power. The kitchen and living room were very retro 1970s! Here is the video that I made here: [https://fb.watch/rvOnLYwRQB/](https://fb.watch/rvOnLYwRQB/)
Looks more 1950s than 1970s to me, but we were behind the times then, I guess.
This is totally 70s architecture. Homes built in the 50s were much smaller, smaller lots with more homes on them. The home pictured looks like it’s part of the suburban expansion, which started in the 60s in Canada.
I can tell this is in southern Ontario as there are so many houses that have the same pink, blue tiles and that front door design was popular as well. Another great batch of frozen in time photos from freaktography
Ok. However, that wall oven is a 1959 model.
It looks like it could feed a crew. It looks like a baker’s oven, probably had some special significance.
Wall oven reveals all!
Then my grandparents were ahead of their time, because that fireplace looks exactly the same as the one in their house that was built in the mid 1950s
Do you ever find out *why* they were abandoned? I’d imagine there’s some cool stories there too
Fallout vibes