It took me almost two years before I managed to return to the workers' institute. This time we explored all the floors and buildings I had missed the previous time.
The previous time we walked through the ground floor, so this time we headed straight up.
Time had peeled off the paint and vandals had done the rest.
Basically the two upper floors of the main building consisted of a long corridor and identical rooms. All radiators had been removed since my previous visit. Here someone had removed the floor too.
Details like this were common in public buildings from the 50's. That would mean that the walls were never painted.
This is where we quit exploring the last time when we found a bed and some pretty fresh signs of life. But now we'd go further.
Here all rooms were of different shapes and sizes, but they all were equally smashed.
It seems that some renovations were planned but never executed.
Even the kitchen design looks like it could be from the 50's.
Up in the attic we found this strange installation.
In the other annex building was what I believed to be the former canteen of the institute. The new canteen was in another, newer annex.
When the workers' institute moved away, the house found other tenants. Someone actually lived here, because their mail was coming here. The address was to this location.
The basement was filled with water and books and files and stuff including loads of history documents of the institute.
The new canteen.
Upstairs were rooms where the institute students could stay.
Around 100 photos from the location:
https://desertedfi...rs-institute-2016/ Another photo project with a dancer in this location:
https://desertedfi...g-class-girl-2017/