Some months ago I suddenly stopped watching your videos, but now I'm starting to watch them again and now I have 3 months worth of post 10 videos to watch. I love trains and abandoned structures so this video was amazing. Love your channel dude keep it up 👊
We were fortunate enough in Madison, WI to have our C & NW roundhouse turned into office space. The turntable is gone but you can still walk right in to the common area.
This was a favorite. It is always a shame to see disuse turn to outright violent vandalism. These looked like they were amazing buildings in their prime. That brickwork was solid. Not even crumbled mortar!
Wonderful video. Why people give it a thumbs down i don’t know 🤷♂️ for me @post10 takes us on some amazing journeys, great commentary all good stuff. Keep doing it post 10 and ignore any negativity.
When the Milwaukee Road closed down, I went through the roundhouse and some of the other nearby buildings before they were torn down. Everything was still intact, but some of the windows were broken. It was a full half circle building - huge place! Wish I would have gotten some pictures!
I bet Everyone in America Has Awesome Things To Explore and Learn about Very Close to Them But They Just NEVER Even Think To Look. Post 10 lives The Life We All Wish We Had! Thanks For Sharing It With Us! 🇺🇸
Nice find 👍 The dirty snow is most likely a pile of asbestos insulation. I bet you're right about that fibrous material being asbestos as well. Would make sense. All the asbestos probably played a role in it being abandoned - cheaper to let the building fall down than to do the remediation.
when i hear round house i imagine a neolithic home somewhere in england that an archeologist has found. ( phil harding with his super powered trowel). i never thought about a round house for trains. amazing. i cant express how amazing your videos are. i watch them all the time. my nights off work i sit with a beer and binge your content. best wishes from the UK
Love the time team and Mick Ashton was a legend . Are post 10 is an amazing source of knowledge and information . His video have inspired lots of overs to do the same. Good water management is vitally important in any settlement large or small.
For some reason RUclips did not show me this one, I just happened upon it in the trending home section, I’m so glad I got to see it, fascinating railroad buildings.💚💚
This is the first time I have ever heard of a round house for locomotives. That would have been an awesome thing to witness when it was operational. BTW, love your hat!
Hey, Post 10. I just came to this video since it's the latest and I'll have a greater chance of you seeing my comment. In your video where you're chased by a beaver and at the end of the video it was hiding under a stump near you, but it was hard to see through the water because it's reflecting other things plus a glare. My idea/suggestion/request is that you buy a polarized camera lens and polarized sunglasses. They'll help you see through the water and lower the intensity of glares from the sun. I think this would really help the viewers when you point out things in the water, but it's too murky for us to see. P.S. I love your videos! :)
It's so sad that kids think it is cool to vandalize. So many historic sites have been destroyed because of this. Parents should teach their children not to break things, even if they are abandoned. Great video Post 10. I look forward to your tours.
Thanks P10. Just imagine that place 80 or 100 ? years ago when it was full of locomotives and people putting in an honest days work. Tho it was probably a more dangerous place to spend the day then, than it is now.
What kills me is that technically there's so much lumber there that could be saved/reused, sure even if only after re-sawing/planing. Wood of that size is expensive and hard to find these days. :(
If you would like to see a really big preserved roundhouse, check out the one in Spencer, NC at the NC Transportation Museum. It used to be the Southern Railroad’s steam engine repair facility.
Havent even started the vid and ik it's gonna be a banger Edit: i love how you wouldnt expect someone like post to say yo but some how when in the context of amazement, yo transcends stereotypes and language norms
Whenever my life gets me so down, I know I can go down To where the music and the fun never ends! As long as the music keeps playin', you know what I'm sayin', You know that I can find a friend... At the Roundhouse!
Quite a historic and fantastic building. Indeed, would make a great house. Definitely a shame it was left to fall apart. Buildings like these are what shaped history and should be considered a historic property. Love the video!
Yep they're called inspection pits, I spent a bit of time in those when I worked for the railway here in Australia. They're generally only about 4-5 feet deep so you have to duck to get under low hanging train equipment especially if you're over 6 feet tall like me.
100% for sure that is asbestos. After 40 years of construction I can't help but imagine what it was like, back in the day, as the building near completion. The people that worked to build it and how proud they were of it. The people that worked in it and how proud they were of their work. The individual lives that played out within the walls of the building and in the surrounding area. Friendships that were forged. Marriages children, company family day potlucks. I wonder how many ghosts haunt the building. Never wanting to leave because it was basically their home for so long.
I would take more care in regard to asbestos in many of the buildings you investigate. I just watched your Turnpike tunnels video and was surprised the asbestos had not been removed before making it a bike trail. It’s the airborne particles you need to worry about as you walk around and stir up particles of asbestos. You should be wearing a mask as precaution. All those kids who hang around in those areas are putting their lives at risk in more ways than they know. Could be a case for legal action down the road. I’m in Australia, and that would not be allowed to happen.
That's because it was Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania has very good exploring laws. It's not an official bike trail but you're allowed to use it as such and there's a big warning sign before entering the structures and tunnel that there may be asbestos or a bunch of other listed dangerous inside. You can't sue them if you get hurt on that place
It would be so cool if you could jump back in time for a bit and be in there when it was fully functioning. Hey, big culvert clogging rains heading your way tonight and tomorrow! YAY!!!
My late Uncle Bob was a plumber for the Santa Fe Railroad down in San Bernardino, Ca. I remember him telling me what an insane job it was, as they put the plumbing pretty much wherever the hell you could squeeze it in. He got a decent retirement, though, after 30-40 years of work. I also had a friend that worked for Santa Fe, only i don’t recall him ever going to work. It was like he had bottomless paid time off, and they never questioned it. That’s what fucks things up for unions and such, why they get bad reputations.
How on earth do you manage to get the time to do all these videos. It’s not just the filming but then you have to do the editing and the up loading. It’s mind boggling. Fabulous. Loved the one with the eagles nest 🇬🇧👍
I found this information: "These funnels appear to be composed of sheets of cement-asbestos board supported within a frame of steel angles. Cement-asbestos board was introduced to the United States shortly after 1900."
There used to be a roundhouse and a couple turntables locally. They are long gone. All torn down many years ago. The spot where the roundhouse used to be is now a parking lot. There is a giant circle crack in the blacktop from where the turntable used to be.
I love seeing the plants growing on and in the old buildings. It's always pretty. Sad that people have intentionally furthered the destruction though by setting it on fire, smashing walls/windows, and painting graffiti on everything. That and just leaving trash everywhere.
The depressions in between the track inside The Roundhouse were inspection pits while the vents above them were meant to vent the exhaust from the steam locomotives
Thank you very much for replying to my comment. I would love if you could take a quick look at my page and any feedback would be greatly appreciated. I have a new video out now. Hope you like and share.
Hello post 10 I have watched all your videos I have a hard time typing because I have severe arthritis in my hands I was just wondering if you would start doing mugs so that I could buy one please think about it God bless and stay safe my friend my daughter who is 14 but I also like to know if you can do stickers we want you together so we think you're really cool
Great vids...hi from North east England were we never see a beaver ....(well apart from u know what)anyhoo you're a star and should get paid well for all ya unclogging!
The newapapers in the region would have photos in their archives of the buildings? Like when it was built, pictures of the owners, officials, the builders, workers and so on. Fun to compare when all the windows where whole and everything was working.
Great tour. It's very sad that buildings engineered and built so well are abandoned. Such a waste of resources and opportunity to conserve history and architecture of the area. We live in a society with a throw-away mentality.
@@brucerowe2895 I wouldn't have thought politics at all unless you mentioned it. There are abandoned buildings all over the country. There are numerous YT channels that explore them.
your ability to see a few details and piece it all together amazes me every video. You're so good at figuring out the full story.
Ikr awesome
Some months ago I suddenly stopped watching your videos, but now I'm starting to watch them again and now I have 3 months worth of post 10 videos to watch. I love trains and abandoned structures so this video was amazing. Love your channel dude keep it up 👊
It is very interesting thanks. Chris from England 🏴
We were fortunate enough in Madison, WI to have our C & NW roundhouse turned into office space. The turntable is gone but you can still walk right in to the common area.
This is brilliant - love abandoned buildings, love disused railways- both together is pure joy (if a little sad as well!)
While you are often excited, I don’t often hear you laugh. It’s good to hear you laugh. 😁
Post10 putting loads of content= happy me !! Keep them coming and keeping everyone entertained 🤙🏽
Great explore and video!
👍👍👍👊😎
These roundhouses are beautiful marvels of architecture and engineering, it is a crying shame that these great buildings are left to rot.
Cool video. Historical places are interesting to explore. Imagining what life was like for the folks that worked and lived there. Thanks.
I loved the excitement in your voice when you saw those stairs!
This was a favorite. It is always a shame to see disuse turn to outright violent vandalism. These looked like they were amazing buildings in their prime. That brickwork was solid. Not even crumbled mortar!
Wonderful video. Why people give it a thumbs down i don’t know 🤷♂️ for me @post10 takes us on some amazing journeys, great commentary all good stuff. Keep doing it post 10 and ignore any negativity.
Another awesome video post 10...you can really sense the passion he is expressing in this video ...luv your work...stay safe
When the Milwaukee Road closed down, I went through the roundhouse and some of the other nearby buildings before they were torn down. Everything was still intact, but some of the windows were broken. It was a full half circle building - huge place! Wish I would have gotten some pictures!
I bet Everyone in America Has Awesome Things To Explore and Learn about Very Close to Them But They Just NEVER Even Think To Look.
Post 10 lives The Life We All Wish We Had!
Thanks For Sharing It With Us! 🇺🇸
Great intro @post 10
Grease pits is what you call those maintenance tunnels.
Loved the video, thanks for filming!!
Yes that appears to JohnsMansville sheet Asbestos
Nice find 👍
The dirty snow is most likely a pile of asbestos insulation. I bet you're right about that fibrous material being asbestos as well. Would make sense. All the asbestos probably played a role in it being abandoned - cheaper to let the building fall down than to do the remediation.
when i hear round house i imagine a neolithic home somewhere in england that an archeologist has found. ( phil harding with his super powered trowel). i never thought about a round house for trains. amazing. i cant express how amazing your videos are. i watch them all the time. my nights off work i sit with a beer and binge your content. best wishes from the UK
Love the time team and Mick Ashton was a legend . Are post 10 is an amazing source of knowledge and information . His video have inspired lots of overs to do the same. Good water management is vitally important in any settlement large or small.
I hear "round house" and for some reason think of Whittier. Funny thing is I'm not even sure the have a round house.
I have to think of Chuck Norris' 'Roundhouse Kick' 😁
@@mightyV444 lol
I'm expecting a group of angry beavers to appear at any moment.
WOO WOO WOO!!! He screams.
@@martz1191 apparently he's not scared 😁
Was curious to check this one out from the outside. Even better to find you did a video on it.
For some reason RUclips did not show me this one, I just happened upon it in the trending home section, I’m so glad I got to see it, fascinating railroad buildings.💚💚
This is the first time I have ever heard of a round house for locomotives. That would have been an awesome thing to witness when it was operational. BTW, love your hat!
Hey, Post 10. I just came to this video since it's the latest and I'll have a greater chance of you seeing my comment.
In your video where you're chased by a beaver and at the end of the video it was hiding under a stump near you, but it was hard to see through the water because it's reflecting other things plus a glare.
My idea/suggestion/request is that you buy a polarized camera lens and polarized sunglasses. They'll help you see through the water and lower the intensity of glares from the sun. I think this would really help the viewers when you point out things in the water, but it's too murky for us to see.
P.S. I love your videos! :)
This is flipping Awesome! Thank you for taking us with you 👍
It's so sad that kids think it is cool to vandalize. So many historic sites have been destroyed because of this. Parents should teach their children not to break things, even if they are abandoned. Great video Post 10. I look forward to your tours.
Very cool.
Thanks P10. Just imagine that place 80 or 100 ? years ago when it was full of locomotives and people putting in an honest days work. Tho it was probably a more dangerous place to spend the day then, than it is now.
I really like your vids Dude, always interesting! I look forward to each new one. You really have a talent. My favorite You Tuber!
Wooo, Wooo, wooo love it. Would love to check the place out in person, this is the next best thing, very close second to seeing it in person. 👍
Industrial or steam punk look is quite popular :) am surprised how much is still visible.
You keep posting awesome content. Banging videos out like overtime. Love it! Let's get you to a million.
What kills me is that technically there's so much lumber there that could be saved/reused, sure even if only after re-sawing/planing.
Wood of that size is expensive and hard to find these days. :(
Ohhhhh, *now* I get it! That's where the expression 'Chuck Norris' Roundhouse Kick' comes from! 😀 Very cool video! Thank you, young man! 🙂👍
If you would like to see a really big preserved roundhouse, check out the one in Spencer, NC at the NC Transportation Museum. It used to be the Southern Railroad’s steam engine repair facility.
Havent even started the vid and ik it's gonna be a banger
Edit: i love how you wouldnt expect someone like post to say yo but some how when in the context of amazement, yo transcends stereotypes and language norms
Whenever my life gets me so down,
I know I can go down
To where the music and the fun never ends!
As long as the music keeps playin', you know what I'm sayin',
You know that I can find a friend...
At the Roundhouse!
Love your taste in aesthetic Post!
your videos are so relaxing and helping me sleep so much right now thank you man ❤️
Liked video 👍😢
That is absolutely amazing place, thanks for sharing
Wow, this was pretty cool, never seen anything like that before. Thanks for showing.
Quite a historic and fantastic building. Indeed, would make a great house. Definitely a shame it was left to fall apart. Buildings like these are what shaped history and should be considered a historic property. Love the video!
Yep they're called inspection pits, I spent a bit of time in those when I worked for the railway here in Australia. They're generally only about 4-5 feet deep so you have to duck to get under low hanging train equipment especially if you're over 6 feet tall like me.
@post10 around 16:10 is that a rod cone off the front of a train???
100% for sure that is asbestos.
After 40 years of construction I can't help but imagine what it was like, back in the day, as the building near completion.
The people that worked to build it and how proud they were of it. The people that worked in it and how proud they were of their work. The individual lives that played out within the walls of the building and in the surrounding area. Friendships that were forged. Marriages children, company family day potlucks.
I wonder how many ghosts haunt the building. Never wanting to leave because it was basically their home for so long.
Looks like a Call of Duty map 😆
Great video- I bet, in its heyday, that roundhouse would've been magnificent.
I would take more care in regard to asbestos in many of the buildings you investigate. I just watched your Turnpike tunnels video and was surprised the asbestos had not been removed before making it a bike trail. It’s the airborne particles you need to worry about as you walk around and stir up particles of asbestos. You should be wearing a mask as precaution. All those kids who hang around in those areas are putting their lives at risk in more ways than they know. Could be a case for legal action down the road. I’m in Australia, and that would not be allowed to happen.
That's because it was Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania has very good exploring laws. It's not an official bike trail but you're allowed to use it as such and there's a big warning sign before entering the structures and tunnel that there may be asbestos or a bunch of other listed dangerous inside. You can't sue them if you get hurt on that place
It would be so cool if you could jump back in time for a bit and be in there when it was fully functioning. Hey, big culvert clogging rains heading your way tonight and tomorrow! YAY!!!
We already got the heavy rain
My late Uncle Bob was a plumber for the Santa Fe Railroad down in San Bernardino, Ca. I remember him telling me what an insane job it was, as they put the plumbing pretty much wherever the hell you could squeeze it in. He got a decent retirement, though, after 30-40 years of work. I also had a friend that worked for Santa Fe, only i don’t recall him ever going to work. It was like he had bottomless paid time off, and they never questioned it. That’s what fucks things up for unions and such, why they get bad reputations.
Hey Post,
you look great!
Cool exploration that you took us on. 👍🚂🚃🚃 😊
Decided to check for new uploads. And man, was I lucky
know that feel bro.. :D
Post 10
Thank you for this fantastic find.
👍👍
How on earth do you manage to get the time to do all these videos. It’s not just the filming but then you have to do the editing and the up loading. It’s mind boggling. Fabulous. Loved the one with the eagles nest 🇬🇧👍
Weekend trips, film like 5 places a day.
Super interesting video, thanks for sharing!
Yep, lots of asbestos board. It used to be common.
I found this information: "These funnels appear to be composed of sheets of cement-asbestos board supported within a
frame of steel angles. Cement-asbestos board was introduced to the United States shortly after 1900."
me too, great timing. Nice to see your face post10.
That roundhouse would have been a great showroom for cars.
Great day! Another awesome video 👍
cool building, super smart way to manage trains
There used to be a roundhouse and a couple turntables locally. They are long gone. All torn down many years ago. The spot where the roundhouse used to be is now a parking lot. There is a giant circle crack in the blacktop from where the turntable used to be.
Thanks post. It is a cool video of abandoned buildings. Yeag them beams and structures are built to last forever
Its amazing how Post 10 make something that looks boring to many of us into something very interesting, and exciting.
Just another great video with a lot of historical importance but it is a shame people have to burn buildings for no good reason!
Bakersfield where i film trains still has a turntable
It is a massive building. Did they build replacement's. I wonder what new maintenance buildings look like. Have you toured newer ones.
Wow love the hat , love the videos your giving us , Thanks x
I love seeing the plants growing on and in the old buildings. It's always pretty.
Sad that people have intentionally furthered the destruction though by setting it on fire, smashing walls/windows, and painting graffiti on everything. That and just leaving trash everywhere.
The depressions in between the track inside The Roundhouse were inspection pits while the vents above them were meant to vent the exhaust from the steam locomotives
4:04 that looks more like the second floor the roof would have been above that
Did you not read the caption?
@@post.10 I read it
As handsome and awesome as usual post 10 ❤️
Thank you for the ❤️
Big guy
Reminds me of the map Roundhouse from Call of Duty World at War. Awesome!
@post10 should link your Patreon and mention it in videos so everyone knows you have one so they can help support you sharing the adventures.
Aloha! Amazing!
When I saw the thumbnail, I thought Post10 had found the secret hiding ground for the Millennium Falcon!
12:00 I like this Skyrim mod :D
Like the video so much going on
Thank you very much for replying to my comment. I would love if you could take a quick look at my page and any feedback would be greatly appreciated. I have a new video out now. Hope you like and share.
Orange and yellow.
There was a round house in the neighborhood where i grew up, but they tore it down., now its a big empty lot.
The technical term for the basement in an auto shop that has under car access is THE PIT
Hello post 10 I have watched all your videos I have a hard time typing because I have severe arthritis in my hands I was just wondering if you would start doing mugs so that I could buy one please think about it God bless and stay safe my friend my daughter who is 14 but I also like to know if you can do stickers we want you together so we think you're really cool
Great vids...hi from North east England were we never see a beaver ....(well apart from u know what)anyhoo you're a star and should get paid well for all ya unclogging!
Did ya hear about the the beaver who owned an off licence. Its called beaver liquors😝
I n Evanston wy they have around house that is still in operation
I can't be the only one imaging Thomas The Tank Engine in that roundhouse?
If this is in Lebanon, it is now being demolished by the state in order to create a park.
As usual nice content sir.
This is actually pretty creepy place lol...
the culvert cleaner is turning into URBEX
The newapapers in the region would have photos in their archives of the buildings? Like when it was built, pictures of the owners, officials, the builders, workers and so on. Fun to compare when all the windows where whole and everything was working.
Roundhouse engine sheds would be useful for railtour engines to stop and stay for the night
Yes it was interesting. Thanks for sharing man.
Surprised you haven't visited the tunnel yet
I really don’t understand why people have a burn fetish with abandoned places.
Great tour. It's very sad that buildings engineered and built so well are abandoned. Such a waste of resources and opportunity to conserve history and architecture of the area. We live in a society with a throw-away mentality.
New York, Chicago, Portland. To name a few cities with empty buildings. Didn't mean to bring politics into the discussion.
@@brucerowe2895 I wouldn't have thought politics at all unless you mentioned it. There are abandoned buildings all over the country. There are numerous YT channels that explore them.
Wonder if the fire department burned it for practice? Abandoned rails are so fun to explore. Heck live ones are too.
There is always a conflict between local Government and train companies not wanting or fearing the giving up rights of way
holy shit i literally have one of these like 15 mins from my house and its abandoned aswell, its such an awesome place