That old light bulb-like fire extinguisher is filled with now-banned carbon tetrachloride. It was meant to be thrown at the base of the fire. My grandparents old farmhouse in North Dakota had several of them on the walls and stairs. Besides throwing them, their bulb extinguishers wall brackets had an extra feature that automatically dropped the bulb when the heat of a fire reached it.
You are absolutely correct. Before the invention of gas forced air the windows would get mold because of lack of air flow. That is a big problem in northern areas where Steam heat, electric heat, and boiler heat are primarily used. During the summer those allowed air flow without the need for the doors to be open. Sadly most of those on the entryway to buildings in my area are either walled off or converted into air conditioner housing which I never really understood because they’d drip on people coming in and out of the buildings.
@@tarn1135 In the United States, at least, most fire codes forbid transoms due to the ability for fire to spread between rooms through them; the Our Lady of the Angels school fire was one horrific instance in which the fire shattered transom windows and spread along the ceiling.
Surprised to see a transom in BC - they appeared to be quite common in places like St. Louis (where sealed up ones were all over the house we rented). I thought it was for letting out heat but I see in other comments it was more for reducing mold and what not - and yeah, in St. Louis - I could see that being a positive feature :)
The windows with hinges above the doors are called Transom Windows. They were invented in the 1800's, and were the first 'air conditioners'. Homes and buildings in the olden days had high ceilings for air flow using those windows. They would keep the homes and buildings cool in the summer, and warm in the winter. Many old homes still have them to this very day, and work quite well.
Frank says that you forgot to mention that the Empress is for sale! I lived in this building solo for about four months… 6000 square feet and no heat. Great video Dustin, I’m glad it worked out.
@@deetw6470 He really sounds not bitter and is humble about what it could be to fit the neighborhood. I hope so too because I’m sure seeing someone else happy with it make him feel complete with it. I’m tipsy so overthinking lol
Gordobone, you must be a wealthy world traveler to be able to afford to stay at the Empress for four months. That is a testament to the glamour and prestige of Stewart. I love Dustin's videos.
Love when you include local historians in your videos - super cool that you reach out to them to give a more formal and in-depth background of the places you visit. Equally love the ones where you are just adventuring around and discovering on your own. Keep up the good work!
6:20 A Transom was quite common in buildings of that era in the United States. Ventilation. 8:29 "Knob and tube" wiring, before good insulation was developed. 11:00 Carbon Tetrachloride was used in these fire extinguishers. The Chemical causes brain damage, so it's no longer used. The windows have a sash weight on each side, so that's 4 per window.
The glass in the old windows is wavy because of how it was made. A large gather of glass is attached to a blow pipe and then blown into a big long bubble. The craftsman would stand next to a large pit and swing the bubble like a pendulum while blowing it to the correct thickness. The ends of the hardened bubble were cut off and a crack was made down the side of the resulting cylinder of glass. The cracked cylinders were then placed in a kiln to soften where they could then be opened up at the crack and spread into the sheets that were then cut to size for the windows. Cool stuff! I'm a glass blower who also installed windows for a number of years. Curiosity got the best of me and I had to figure it out one day. :)
In that room with the toasters and stuff , you came across an old type lithograph machine ( with the big crank ) an old time copy machine .... I have not seen an old one like that in a long time .....nice to see...
My uncle owns an old mansion built in 1898 and some of the windows are still original with original glass with those counter weights. The upper floors still have the original wiring with those insulators but there's no power going to those. This is in Everett Washington.
original wiring was called “knob and tube”. The tubes went through the wood, ie studs, wall plates, and the wires inside of them were thus isolated. Still find some early 1900’s homes with it, a huge red flag for home inspectors. 🔥 Great walk through ! 👍
@@paulortiz2035 Connections, junctions were twisted wire, over time these connections fail to make good contact, causing a higher resistance which creates heat causing the rubber insulation to burn.
@@aaronk534 agreed! I actually am a construction inspector and I see them occasionally in the historic buildings I look at. fire regulations and modern HVAC systems is what did them in. Usually they demand they get sealed and hardware removed and they can stay
That used to be the thing in the day, so could get cross ventilation in the rooms. Wouldn't give much privacy, giving the mattress box springs always squeaked. Those weights are called sash weights. I once renovated an old house that came from an Eaton's catalogue. Plans, hardware, windows, lumber. Everything came in the package. The weights used to go inside the wall cavity though. Insulation consisted of old newspapers, calendars, whatever they had on hand. the rest was filled with sawdust, wood chips, that would be great for rodents and settle to the bottom of the stud space. Not very well insulated to say the least.
@@IratePuffin oh yeah they are definitely used in residential to this day and sealed. Hotels aren’t classified as residential and that’s why you wouldn’t see them there today. And a lot of times transoms are over cased openings, those can be in any use type
5:20 - That little room is probably the phone booth. Other old hotels of that era with which I am familiar had that. The doors, windows, and flooring are so much like the house I grew up in Nice to see.
Great old building. The transom windows are great for air movement. I remember the ones in my grandmothers house in NY. My first house was built in 37 still had knob and tube wiring. It’s downfall was insulation… we started adding it to our homes and it could no longer dissipate heat and would fail. Packed away somewhere, I have a box of the old “fire grenades.” You would literally take it out of the holder and throw it at the fire. Other models had a spring and bimetallic strip that would break at a preset temperature! Thank you for the walk-through!
I love it when you find people that are willing to share the history they know of a particular area or town. It makes your videos the best and most informative travel series on the internet. Thank you! Always look forward to your videos.
The center shaft on buildings for ventilation and light is called an atrium still in use on large buildings today. Most of the schools that I went to had transoms common in Office Buildings the ones in the hotels usually have curtains across them for privacy or frosted glass. The machine that you were turning is probably an old mimeograph machine used to make handbills. And of course the iron bars are sash weights. The window frame is called the sash and the weight counterbalances the sash so therefore referred to as the sash weight. The 8th probably refers to 8 lb my job when I was working construction as a Young Man was to switch out the ropes for chains. The hard part was removing the wood trim without breaking it. Sometimes the frame had a wooden plug held in by a screw to make it easy to access the weight.
Not just for light on that big vertical also chimney in summer to draw heat,but holy canoli that building is cherry! Here in south everything rots in two years if no maintenance.Beautiful how that spruce has held up, truly boatbuilder's choice(sitka) good vid thanx
I am really jealous of your adventures Dustin. I wish I was physically able. Thank you for the chance to adventure vicariously with you through these videos.
What a spectacular building & rich history! My parents' house has many of the same architectural elements. Appreciate the attention you were able to give it w/ just a lens :)
Only just starting to watch this episode….and that Toaster guy I saw on a previous episode pops up. I really like this guy. He has a voice and demeanour, that I could listen to all day. Don’t really know what, but he does. You gotta get him to start his own channel 😀 Cheers, love your channel. Rob, Tasmania, Australia 🇦🇺
Really cool place. Thanks for going to the top for a quick view. I have seen some of the old fire extinguishers. Glad you pointed it out. Thanks for the Empress Hotel.🙂
I really love your content an appreciate that you get the actual facts from the people who are from the area or who are trying to preserve the places. I’m binging on your page now 😅🙏🏾✨💖
In 1998 we took a trip to Alaska and came back on the Casriar???highway we were going to go toward Stewart but did not .But now will be able to see some of the area .thank you for your adventures. From the Sumas area in wash state .p.s. HOPE you find your 2 wheeler 😞
Amazingly beautiful video like always. Thank you so much for letting us see God’s beautiful creation through your eyes and videos. God bless you and may all your travels be fun and safe…
I retired as a fire inspector in a major department 8 years ago. The Empress was beautiful, in it's own historic way, but there are reasons they don't build most things like that building anymore. The main object of fire codes is "life safety". If something goes dreadfully wrong and there is a fire can the people safely get out ? Looking at the old construction allowed back in the day the answer would be no in that building. It would be beautiful renovated but I think the owner you met would have a case of major sticker shock to get it where it could be safely occupied. That old wood and top to bottom openings would cause it to burn fast and completely. I got called to inspect a space in a building where the owner found a box full of those carbon tet fire bombs. I told him how toxic they were and he needed to get some guidance on getting rid of them safely. Well, his idea of getting rid of them was to put them in his car and take them home. He dropped the box and broke several of them. He had the sense to run but had to called a haz mat clean up company to "fix his mess. After two days of his business being shut down and several thousand dollars for clean up he could get on with his life and business.
Woopie shit some nickel and dime fire sticks. Like they are going to destroy planet earth. You government hyper ventilation make believe government leaches..
How about you just let us enjoy the video, Fire Marshall Bill? I bet you're a blast at parties. You're probably the one guy that walks around looking for fire hazards and exits...just in case.
thanks for that explanation! I would not have thought about these problems, but makes complete sense. Because I too thought this building needs the be brought back, but that is a real problem. its a beautiful building, but it probably never going to happen.
@@stevebrant9012 just enjoy the video. You know people like Fire Marshall Bill saved a lot of peoples lives in the World trade center, because unlike the ignorant dumb asses, he knew where the fire exits where!
@@tomstulc9143 they actually cause brain damage if inhaled, they're very dangerous. Maybe you mishandled a few yourself and that's why you are prone to sudden outburst of anger towards people just trying to spread information? Good luck with that bud.
I love your adventures, and I would really love to see your production value for an adventure up the Nahanni River valley. It has amazing history and creepy mythology. I watched an amazing film made by Mel and Ethel Ross from 1958, they briefly looked at some of the caves in the area and found burned areas where fires had been and petroglyphs, but you couldn’t see them well with the technology they had at the time.
Those horizontal windows above the doors are called transoms and were used for air circulation. I love the toaster collection and the old mimeograph machines and sowing machine.
I love to see an episode like this on the Coalmont Hotel! Carful with those early fire extinguishers, They have some crazy toxic chemical in them. It’s not water
Great video! I love the Grand name given to this hotel. What a interesting history. Hard to imagine someone would be arrest just for the country they were born in. Sorry about your bike. That must have been so disappointing. Hopefully it will not slow you down any as we all love your videos and they just get better and better!
The hinges on the upper doorframe is for air flow. We had counter waits in the windows at the Kitwanga CN Station. Thank you for the beautiful gift of history in our region
Awesome experience and those doors with windows some homes had those long ago there were exciting to have if you locked yourself out of the room you always had access to climb throw the window over the door way do yeah it was awesome to see a place again with windows over the door entrance
Liked the window weights because they reminded of when I was a kid and one of my jobs was to replace the rope. ALSO INTERESTING is the revolutionaries use to melt those down to make lead bullets because the British had confiscated powder and ammo trying to disarm them.
Hey Dustin,I was really sorry to hear about the "Gnarley Davidson"...I just don't get people and their feelings of entitlement to other folks stuff. I've been really enjoying your Northern B.C. series (I'm from Vancouver Island originally and would love to do a series like what you do,only just on the Island itself (I'm from Port Renfrew ,raised in Duncan) but know the island from Victoria to Cape Scott.....anyway,thanks for doing what you do,it keeps an old dude breathing and dreamin'...oh,and BTW,the windows above the doors that you saw were called transoms....and as for the light shafts in a building,I lived in an S.R.O hotel in Vancouver that had one,and I had a room on the 3rd floor and my window opened onto the light shaft,only it had been made into a sitting area/lounge on the main floor...kind of a cool place........peace out Mr.P...take nothing but pictures ,leave nothing but footprints...such an absolutely awesome mantra.
Great history of Stuart. Thanks. When you get a new gnarly.. hide a GPS tracker on it. Link it to your own phone. Camping and outdoor stores should stock them.
beautifully made structure. The quality with which is was built is apparent. It would be great to make it a luxury spa hotel with all those little rooms for treatments
Absolutely loved this place!!! Gorgeous old building!!! It may be in a bad part of town, but I’d live there!!!! Great structure! The things that I could do with this property!!! I’m sure that it has no insulation in it, so that’ll be the 1st thing! Love the sky Windows!!! I’d accentuate them! You could make that building a focal point of the town & the possibilities are endless!!! The scenery is beautiful! Who cares that across the street is a junkyard…the views inside & out make up for that!!! Thank you for sharing this wonderful adventure with us Dustin, I loved it ❤️❤️❤️
Amazing building and such a interesting town. Been researching it since your last video. I would of asked to spent a night in it. Would be a amazing experience. Great video dude. Adventure on!! 🤘😁🤘⛰⛏🇨🇦
That old fashioned copier and the sewing machine at time stamp 15:30, how cool is that! Only other time I've seen that old style copier was on an episode of NCIS when their whole system shut down and they had to make copies of a persons mug shot by running it through one of those. Maybe it's not actually that but it looks a lot like it.
I intend to be in Stewart next summer and see this extraordinary hotel, although, I don’t expect to see the inside. Thanks for giving me such a wonderful tour!
That was a awesome building. It has big potential. Thanks for sharing this adventure with us .videos like this make me proud to be a patreon member! Keep up the awesome job
Took one look at that ladder on the top floor and thought please don't do it. My heart was in my throat when you did. Great explore once again. Please stay safe!
Potential??? ----- As what??? A fire trap??? It would go up in minutes!!! With all of that nice dried pine! Kind of wonder if they even have a fire house. If they do they didn't mention it. There is no insurance company that would insure it, which should tell you something! Take it apart and sell it as salvage. It is about the only feasible thing to do. Unfortunately, just because it is old, it doesn't mean it should be 'saved'. Let's move on!
The old Windsor hotel in Garden City Kansas would be a fantastic walk-through. At different times people have talked about renovating it but so far it hasn’t been done.
wonderful old piece of Canadian history. Who staged the room with the steak knife and chair, l was looking for catsup on the floor lolol l enjoy your channel. thank you for the tour
Nice piece of history, well preserved in your video. Some scenes (the plastic doll with the knife) reminded me a bit of "The Shining" 😄 Thanks for sharing!
Amazing piece of history I bet that building had old laundry shoots and things, the bare bones of the building are good, floors are incredible shape, thanks for showing us the Famous Empress Hotel.
Those are my initials and foot prints! I grew up there with Frank’s daughter! So cool!
Could we ask when you placed those there?
Nice! If you have any cool memories, you should share, or send to Dustin to include in a video?? :D
That’s so funny!!! Small world 🌎 is all I can say 👍
Wow, how cool. Id imagine a interesting and fun childhood.
That's pretty cool!
That old light bulb-like fire extinguisher is filled with now-banned carbon tetrachloride. It was meant to be thrown at the base of the fire. My grandparents old farmhouse in North Dakota had several of them on the walls and stairs. Besides throwing them, their bulb extinguishers wall brackets had an extra feature that automatically dropped the bulb when the heat of a fire reached it.
That's a great idea and why don't we come up with something like that but better???
The window above the door is called a transom, no AC so just let’s the airflow without having the doors all Open 😃
You are absolutely correct. Before the invention of gas forced air the windows would get mold because of lack of air flow. That is a big problem in northern areas where Steam heat, electric heat, and boiler heat are primarily used. During the summer those allowed air flow without the need for the doors to be open. Sadly most of those on the entryway to buildings in my area are either walled off or converted into air conditioner housing which I never really understood because they’d drip on people coming in and out of the buildings.
Yup transom-they are like that in all the old homes in the south or they used screen.
@@tarn1135 In the United States, at least, most fire codes forbid transoms due to the ability for fire to spread between rooms through them; the Our Lady of the Angels school fire was one horrific instance in which the fire shattered transom windows and spread along the ceiling.
Surprised to see a transom in BC - they appeared to be quite common in places like St. Louis (where sealed up ones were all over the house we rented). I thought it was for letting out heat but I see in other comments it was more for reducing mold and what not - and yeah, in St. Louis - I could see that being a positive feature :)
The windows with hinges above the doors are called Transom Windows. They were invented in the 1800's, and were the first 'air conditioners'. Homes and buildings in the olden days had high ceilings for air flow using those windows. They would keep the homes and buildings cool in the summer, and warm in the winter. Many old homes still have them to this very day, and work quite well.
I wrote something similar then saw your comment. People are coming back to using them in earthships (in combination with thermal mass cooling pipes).
Frank says that you forgot to mention that the Empress is for sale!
I lived in this building solo for about four months… 6000 square feet and no heat.
Great video Dustin, I’m glad it worked out.
Thanks for the tour amigo. I should have done a sales pitch for him. Lol
I hope whoever buys it restores it & takes good care of the place.
@@deetw6470 He really sounds not bitter and is humble about what it could be to fit the neighborhood. I hope so too because I’m sure seeing someone else happy with it make him feel complete with it. I’m tipsy so overthinking lol
Gordobone, you must be a wealthy world traveler to be able to afford to stay at the Empress for four months. That is a testament to the glamour and prestige of Stewart. I love Dustin's videos.
Love when you include local historians in your videos - super cool that you reach out to them to give a more formal and in-depth background of the places you visit. Equally love the ones where you are just adventuring around and discovering on your own. Keep up the good work!
I like that too. Gives it a documentary feel. Which, I guess it is!
6:20 A Transom was quite common in buildings of that era in the United States. Ventilation. 8:29 "Knob and tube" wiring, before good insulation was developed. 11:00 Carbon Tetrachloride was used in these fire extinguishers. The Chemical causes brain damage, so it's no longer used. The windows have a sash weight on each side, so that's 4 per window.
The glass in the old windows is wavy because of how it was made. A large gather of glass is attached to a blow pipe and then blown into a big long bubble. The craftsman would stand next to a large pit and swing the bubble like a pendulum while blowing it to the correct thickness. The ends of the hardened bubble were cut off and a crack was made down the side of the resulting cylinder of glass. The cracked cylinders were then placed in a kiln to soften where they could then be opened up at the crack and spread into the sheets that were then cut to size for the windows. Cool stuff! I'm a glass blower who also installed windows for a number of years. Curiosity got the best of me and I had to figure it out one day. :)
In that room with the toasters and stuff , you came across an old type lithograph machine ( with the big crank ) an old time copy machine .... I have not seen an old one like that in a long time .....nice to see...
My uncle owns an old mansion built in 1898 and some of the windows are still original with original glass with those counter weights. The upper floors still have the original wiring with those insulators but there's no power going to those. This is in Everett Washington.
original wiring was called “knob and tube”. The tubes went through the wood, ie studs, wall plates, and the wires inside of them were thus isolated. Still find some early 1900’s homes with it, a huge red flag for home inspectors. 🔥 Great walk through ! 👍
Knob and tube wiring should be a HUGE red flag for anyone, if still in use.
Esp home owners/tenants!!!
@@paulortiz2035 Connections, junctions were twisted wire, over time these connections fail to make good contact, causing a higher resistance which creates heat causing the rubber insulation to burn.
Those hinged transoms over the doors is a nice architectural element and would have been a nice feature for air movement.
I had em in an old apt building. I got them working again and they are fantastic at removing hot air. Love them. Shame they quit using em
@@aaronk534 agreed! I actually am a construction inspector and I see them occasionally in the historic buildings I look at. fire regulations and modern HVAC systems is what did them in. Usually they demand they get sealed and hardware removed and they can stay
That used to be the thing in the day, so could get cross ventilation in the rooms.
Wouldn't give much privacy, giving the mattress box springs always squeaked.
Those weights are called sash weights. I once renovated an old house that came from an Eaton's catalogue. Plans, hardware, windows, lumber. Everything came in the package. The weights used to go inside the wall cavity though. Insulation consisted of old newspapers, calendars, whatever they had on hand. the rest was filled with sawdust, wood chips, that would be great for rodents and settle to the bottom of the stud space.
Not very well insulated to say the least.
I have transoms in my house. They’re just solid panes though and don’t open. My house is only 4 years old.
@@IratePuffin oh yeah they are definitely used in residential to this day and sealed. Hotels aren’t classified as residential and that’s why you wouldn’t see them there today. And a lot of times transoms are over cased openings, those can be in any use type
5:20 - That little room is probably the phone booth. Other old hotels of that era with which I am familiar had that. The doors, windows, and flooring are so much like the house I grew up in Nice to see.
Love the old windows with the counterweights
You could make some really nice apartments in that place. Even on that top floor. Stunning views
Great old building. The transom windows are great for air movement. I remember the ones in my grandmothers house in NY. My first house was built in 37 still had knob and tube wiring. It’s downfall was insulation… we started adding it to our homes and it could no longer dissipate heat and would fail. Packed away somewhere, I have a box of the old “fire grenades.” You would literally take it out of the holder and throw it at the fire. Other models had a spring and bimetallic strip that would break at a preset temperature! Thank you for the walk-through!
I love it when you find people that are willing to share the history they know of a particular area or town. It makes your videos the best and most informative travel series on the internet.
Thank you! Always look forward to your videos.
I love the old classic buildings...Nice walk thru!
i traveled into Hyder and Steward in the 1960s, here to see what it looks like today, thanks for the video.
The center shaft on buildings for ventilation and light is called an atrium still in use on large buildings today. Most of the schools that I went to had transoms common in Office Buildings the ones in the hotels usually have curtains across them for privacy or frosted glass. The machine that you were turning is probably an old mimeograph machine used to make handbills. And of course the iron bars are sash weights. The window frame is called the sash and the weight counterbalances the sash so therefore referred to as the sash weight. The 8th probably refers to 8 lb my job when I was working construction as a Young Man was to switch out the ropes for chains. The hard part was removing the wood trim without breaking it. Sometimes the frame had a wooden plug held in by a screw to make it easy to access the weight.
Not just for light on that big vertical also chimney in summer to draw heat,but holy canoli that building is cherry! Here in south everything rots in two years if no maintenance.Beautiful how that spruce has held up, truly boatbuilder's choice(sitka) good vid thanx
Fantastic! Thanks for sharing us some BC rural findings!
I've done some B&W pics back in 2009 of this building who definitely standing out!
I am really jealous of your adventures Dustin. I wish I was physically able.
Thank you for the chance to adventure vicariously with you through these videos.
Me too.
Same. I live vicariously through Dustin! Lol
That building is gorgeous! I would live in it!
at 11:50 ish someone took the "leave nothing but footprints" to heart.
What a spectacular building & rich history! My parents' house has many of the same architectural elements. Appreciate the attention you were able to give it w/ just a lens :)
Awesome video, and beautiful hotel. Thanks for sharing your visit there.
Only just starting to watch this episode….and that Toaster guy I saw on a previous episode pops up. I really like this guy. He has a voice and demeanour, that I could listen to all day. Don’t really know what, but he does. You gotta get him to start his own channel 😀
Cheers, love your channel.
Rob, Tasmania, Australia 🇦🇺
I love that old building! Thanks for showing us.
Wow!! BC history channel once again!! Mind blown!
Thanks for the amazing watch BC friend!
Keep up the good work! Crazy history!
Thank you for listing your sound tracks, great vid as well. Glad to hear the Gnarly is back in your possession.
Where did you find out that his bike was returned? I didn't see anything about it.
I couldn’t help but notice that building when I was there. So cool you were allowed in.
Really cool place. Thanks for going to the top for a quick view. I have seen some of the old fire extinguishers. Glad you pointed it out. Thanks for the Empress Hotel.🙂
I really love your content an appreciate that you get the actual facts from the people who are from the area or who are trying to preserve the places. I’m binging on your page now 😅🙏🏾✨💖
That is the coolest building with the woodwork and hardwood floors and that view is just beautiful ❤ Such a shame it cant be enjoyed
That light bulb fire extinguisher is just awesome and I want them in my house!!!!
In 1998 we took a trip to Alaska and came back on the Casriar???highway we were going to go toward Stewart but did not .But now will be able to see some of the area .thank you for your adventures. From the Sumas area in wash state .p.s. HOPE you find your 2 wheeler 😞
Amazingly beautiful video like always. Thank you so much for letting us see God’s beautiful creation through your eyes and videos. God bless you and may all your travels be fun and safe…
Love the old trim. Great walk thru.
I just discovered your channel, you’re really inspiring me to get back out on the open road and explore 🙌🏻 I need to see B.C.
I retired as a fire inspector in a major department 8 years ago. The Empress was beautiful, in it's own historic way, but there are reasons they don't build most things like that building anymore. The main object of fire codes is "life safety". If something goes dreadfully wrong and there is a fire can the people safely get out ? Looking at the old construction allowed back in the day the answer would be no in that building. It would be beautiful renovated but I think the owner you met would have a case of major sticker shock to get it where it could be safely occupied. That old wood and top to bottom openings would cause it to burn fast and completely. I got called to inspect a space in a building where the owner found a box full of those carbon tet fire bombs. I told him how toxic they were and he needed to get some guidance on getting rid of them safely. Well, his idea of getting rid of them was to put them in his car and take them home. He dropped the box and broke several of them. He had the sense to run but had to called a haz mat clean up company to "fix his mess. After two days of his business being shut down and several thousand dollars for clean up he could get on with his life and business.
Woopie shit some nickel and dime fire sticks. Like they are going to destroy planet earth. You government hyper ventilation make believe government leaches..
How about you just let us enjoy the video, Fire Marshall Bill?
I bet you're a blast at parties. You're probably the one guy that walks around looking for fire hazards and exits...just in case.
thanks for that explanation! I would not have thought about these problems, but makes complete sense. Because I too thought this building needs the be brought back, but that is a real problem. its a beautiful building, but it probably never going to happen.
@@stevebrant9012 just enjoy the video. You know people like Fire Marshall Bill saved a lot of peoples lives in the World trade center, because unlike the ignorant dumb asses, he knew where the fire exits where!
@@tomstulc9143 they actually cause brain damage if inhaled, they're very dangerous. Maybe you mishandled a few yourself and that's why you are prone to sudden outburst of anger towards people just trying to spread information? Good luck with that bud.
What a neat place! This tour was fun!
The footprints on the wall were mine from the 90's!
What a beautiful video, thanks Dustin
I love your adventures, and I would really love to see your production value for an adventure up the Nahanni River valley. It has amazing history and creepy mythology. I watched an amazing film made by Mel and Ethel Ross from 1958, they briefly looked at some of the caves in the area and found burned areas where fires had been and petroglyphs, but you couldn’t see them well with the technology they had at the time.
Thanks for introducing me to the Nahanni Valley.
Those horizontal windows above the doors are called transoms and were used for air circulation. I love the toaster collection and the old mimeograph machines and sowing machine.
This was beautifully shot! Loved hearing the story of the Empress.
I love to see an episode like this on the Coalmont Hotel!
Carful with those early fire extinguishers, They have some crazy toxic chemical in them. It’s not water
Seeing that fire extinguisher was very cool, made this video worth it.
That was a cool place to see. Thank you for sharing.
Your positivity about the past and even current life keeps me goin bro!!! LOVE YOU MAN!!!
Great video! I love the Grand name given to this hotel. What a interesting history. Hard to imagine someone would be arrest just for the country they were born in. Sorry about your bike. That must have been so disappointing. Hopefully it will not slow you down any as we all love your videos and they just get better and better!
Love the blues style music in the background 😎, I play blues harmonica, great video!!!
They just were smarter in the past and built better! Those counter weights is a fantastic idea!
Man, I wish I had the money to save that old place. I love hotels, especially the old ones. Maybe if I win the lotto...good story!!
I really like the knowledge you have and the respect you show for all these places you explore.
The hinges on the upper doorframe is for air flow. We had counter waits in the windows at the Kitwanga CN Station. Thank you for the beautiful gift of history in our region
Awesome experience and those doors with windows some homes had those long ago there were exciting to have if you locked yourself out of the room you always had access to climb throw the window over the door way do yeah it was awesome to see a place again with windows over the door entrance
Its a real did building! It would be a great place for old miners on a pension! Beautiful scenery and peaceful!!!
Liked the window weights because they reminded of when I was a kid and one of my jobs was to replace the rope. ALSO INTERESTING is the revolutionaries use to melt those down to make lead bullets because the British had confiscated powder and ammo trying to disarm them.
You do a GREAT job of this! Thank You for taking us along on the adventure! God bless❤️
The exterior reminds me of the hotel that was decimated and buried under 200 feet of mud at the base of Mount St Helens. Nice guy too!
Another fantastic journey into history. Thanks Capt. D
stayed with my aunt who's lived there long as i can remember. for a summer when i was 15. such an amazing place
Hey Dustin,I was really sorry to hear about the "Gnarley Davidson"...I just don't get people and their feelings of entitlement to other folks stuff. I've been really enjoying your Northern B.C. series (I'm from Vancouver Island originally and would love to do a series like what you do,only just on the Island itself (I'm from Port Renfrew ,raised in Duncan) but know the island from Victoria to Cape Scott.....anyway,thanks for doing what you do,it keeps an old dude breathing and dreamin'...oh,and BTW,the windows above the doors that you saw were called transoms....and as for the light shafts in a building,I lived in an S.R.O hotel in Vancouver that had one,and I had a room on the 3rd floor and my window opened onto the light shaft,only it had been made into a sitting area/lounge on the main floor...kind of a cool place........peace out Mr.P...take nothing but pictures ,leave nothing but footprints...such an absolutely awesome mantra.
It was found! update on his video from a few days ago. :)
@@talyn3932 Thanks Talyn,I hadn't seen the update
Really good views. Thank you.
Great history of Stuart. Thanks. When you get a new gnarly.. hide a GPS tracker on it. Link it to your own phone. Camping and outdoor stores should stock them.
Great video, really enjoyed it ! Thank you !
👍🇨🇦✌️
Love the history of BC places. Thank you
beautifully made structure. The quality with which is was built is apparent. It would be great to make it a luxury spa hotel with all those little rooms for treatments
Absolutely loved this place!!! Gorgeous old building!!! It may be in a bad part of town, but I’d live there!!!! Great structure! The things that I could do with this property!!! I’m sure that it has no insulation in it, so that’ll be the 1st thing! Love the sky Windows!!! I’d accentuate them! You could make that building a focal point of the town & the possibilities are endless!!! The scenery is beautiful! Who cares that across the street is a junkyard…the views inside & out make up for that!!! Thank you for sharing this wonderful adventure with us Dustin, I loved it ❤️❤️❤️
I knew what the window weights were for my old house used to have them!!!
Gotta say I felt my gut pucker up when you climbed that ladder.
Gorgeous building and amazing history ❤️
Amazing building and such a interesting town. Been researching it since your last video. I would of asked to spent a night in it. Would be a amazing experience. Great video dude. Adventure on!!
🤘😁🤘⛰⛏🇨🇦
Best destination adventure so far love the history from the current owner
No RUclips memberships ?? Who's paying your fuel 🤣🤣Awesome adventures & love the history in your videos!
Such a cool place.
That old fashioned copier and the sewing machine at time stamp 15:30, how cool is that! Only other time I've seen that old style copier was on an episode of NCIS when their whole system shut down and they had to make copies of a persons mug shot by running it through one of those. Maybe it's not actually that but it looks a lot like it.
Those window weights and windows above doors were amazing!
I intend to be in Stewart next summer and see this extraordinary hotel, although, I don’t expect to see the inside. Thanks for giving me such a wonderful tour!
Those window weights make great anchors for a kayaks,canoes and small boats
Great documentary Dustin !
That was a awesome building. It has big potential.
Thanks for sharing this adventure with us .videos like this make me proud to be a patreon member!
Keep up the awesome job
Took one look at that ladder on the top floor and thought please don't do it. My heart was in my throat when you did. Great explore once again. Please stay safe!
Potential??? ----- As what??? A fire trap???
It would go up in minutes!!! With all of that nice dried pine! Kind of wonder if they even have a fire house. If they do they didn't mention it. There is no insurance company that would insure it, which should tell you something!
Take it apart and sell it as salvage. It is about the only feasible thing to do.
Unfortunately, just because it is old, it doesn't mean it should be 'saved'.
Let's move on!
That building looks solid
The old Windsor hotel in Garden City Kansas would be a fantastic walk-through. At different times people have talked about renovating it but so far it hasn’t been done.
Thanks again Dustin, great share. Cheers, Billy from Bluff Lk.
Excellent as always Justin!
Any luck finding Knarley yet?
Hope somebody finds him and gets 100 lashes!
wonderful old piece of Canadian history. Who staged the room with the steak knife and chair, l was looking for catsup on the floor lolol l enjoy your channel. thank you for the tour
Nice piece of history, well preserved in your video. Some scenes (the plastic doll with the knife) reminded me a bit of "The Shining" 😄 Thanks for sharing!
I would have fallen right through that shaft. Subbed for that climb.
Very cool building with those light shafts! I have never seen that before.
Amazing piece of history I bet that building had old laundry shoots and things, the bare bones of the building are good, floors are incredible shape, thanks for showing us the Famous Empress Hotel.
Awesome old beautiful building, would make a great apartment hotel. Love the sound of the old wooden floors.
Enjoy all of your video Stay Safe and Sound and well and Strong
What a beautiful old building, would have been quite a thing in the day and could be again.
Thanks Dustin it’s great to see inside some of our North West secrets but I’m torn about whether I want the rest of the world to know about them.
Love that building. Thanks
I cannot believe you went up that ladder! 😮
I would LOVE to B the care taker of It!! Awesome find.Thx 4 all ur vids;)great work.
Trippy place🍄Can imagine it back in the day being really cool🌟Thanks👍
I lived in Stewart for five years. this is the most I have seen of the inside of the old Empress.