Exploring a Huge Abandoned Art Deco Power Plant

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  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2019
  • In this episode, we're exploring an abandoned mid-century power plant constructed in a streamline Art Deco style. The main highlight of the facility is the turbine hall, but we also check out multiple control rooms, the boiler house, administrative offices, and more.
    This episode features music from Corbyn Wood:
    / csw.music
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @ignatiusdemonseed
    @ignatiusdemonseed 4 года назад +91

    3:27 I operated equipment like this for over 22 years. The blades shown at 3:27 are not turbine blades. That is the collector end of the generator, and the blades circulated hydrogen gas through the generator to cool it.
    Turbine blades are within the housings at the other end of the machine.
    9:56 That tool is for replacing incandescent lamps. It attaches to a pole for out-of-reach places.
    14:45 Electrical Switching, Metering and Relaying bay
    17:40 The steam condensers have already been removed. They were located underneath the turbines in the archway-like area in the turbine foundation, near the center of each machine.
    19:30 Feedwater Heater
    19:50 Transport Pipes, carry pulverized fuel and air to the boiler burners.
    19:57 Coal Chutes, carry raw coal from the bunker to the pulverizers.
    21:42 This is where the condenser would have been.
    22:07 Turbine blades and shaft.
    It is astonishing how much material was abandoned at that site.

    • @tomahzo
      @tomahzo Год назад +4

      Very interesting, thanks for commenting :).

    • @jmfz28
      @jmfz28 2 месяца назад

      10:43 Bently Nevada 3300 Vibrations Monitor Manual, that sistem is still in use this days, obsolete but many places still run those as main monitoring for rotating equipment

  • @BreeUSA
    @BreeUSA 4 года назад +783

    You mentioned nothing was being done to preserve it. Well perhaps not physically, but you are preserving it by documenting the architecture and engineering. Good work.

    • @Insomniac_03
      @Insomniac_03 4 года назад +7

      BreeUSA The memory of it, anyway. Which eventually will be all that is left of the many places they’ve explored.

    • @uuuultra
      @uuuultra 4 года назад +8

      Nothing's being done to preserve it because it's a health hazard. Didn't you see all the signs warning about asbestos?
      There were some parts of this video where you could clearly see the guys had their respirators off---needless to say I cringed really hard!
      Seriously hope these guys don't get lung cancer from being careless in these videos...STAY SAFE!!

    • @siaripop7
      @siaripop7 4 года назад +24

      @@uuuultra Asbestos is only dangerous if it becomes airborne dust, not while static.

    • @XplorewithSonny
      @XplorewithSonny 4 года назад +3

      Yeah it’s awesome that we all get to see there incredible places

    • @FishFind3000
      @FishFind3000 4 года назад +6

      uuuultra ✔️ my old middle school was filled with asbestos. They sprayed it so it didn’t go airborne and kids kept going there for years. They also demoed the whole thing and didn’t kill everyone with the Asbestos. If you handle it properly there’s no issues.

  • @UrbanDKaye
    @UrbanDKaye 4 года назад +551

    Those mid-century facilities embraced a really lean design, lots of open space and visibility, and natural light. Love the old tech.

    • @DBradshaw25
      @DBradshaw25 4 года назад +11

      Yes, but it really doesn't look art deco to me. That was really in the 1920s and this facility (which I think might be in MA?) looks more 40s/50s and not 20s.

    • @UrbanDKaye
      @UrbanDKaye 4 года назад +11

      True. The design style is "mid-century modern"/"atomic age."

    • @PaulieTheDude
      @PaulieTheDude 4 года назад +10

      ​@@UrbanDKaye It's called modernism. The main thesis of modernism in architecture was that all of its beauty comes from its pure form, dictated by functionality. That's why simple shapes, no DECOrative elements - as opposed to Art Deco and lots of functional, square-like spaces.

    • @UrbanDKaye
      @UrbanDKaye 4 года назад

      ok.

    • @rublylol7893
      @rublylol7893 4 года назад

      I was just think that

  • @thebigdavester
    @thebigdavester 4 года назад +437

    I've binge-watched the crap out of your videos, and I've seen the two of you mature through them. But you've always had respect for the places you've explored, and you have never lost the sense of awe over what you've found.

    • @ayitsyaboi
      @ayitsyaboi 4 года назад +28

      It's the unspoken urbex code. Take nothing but pictures.

    • @Insomniac_03
      @Insomniac_03 4 года назад +6

      steazye I’m sure some people take something once in a while(I know these guys don’t)

    • @dellahicks7231
      @dellahicks7231 4 года назад +7

      I agree BigDave! Michael and Bryan are slightly older than our son, and I too have seen these young men mature watching their videos through these years, and have respect for the way they conduct themselves.
      (Well except the goose encounter, now that had me laughing too hard!)

    • @thebigdavester
      @thebigdavester 4 года назад +3

      ...and leave nothing but footprints.

    • @kell8721
      @kell8721 4 года назад +4

      Shame about the countless others who had no respect graffitiing all over. I love these two, and watching them explore is awesome!!!

  • @TheRedKing247
    @TheRedKing247 4 года назад +103

    Fun Fact: the reason you've found a bunch of that minty green color in old building is because it was the cheapest kind of paint available. You'll see it across the former Soviet Union for this exact reason.

    • @jefbed212
      @jefbed212 4 года назад +3

      The paint's color was more likely chosen to create an aesthetically pleasing work environment to enhance productivity.

    • @jefbed212
      @jefbed212 4 года назад +2

      @ That makes sense. I remember seeing caterpillar engines on MRAPs being painted light yellow (as well as their popular construction equipment).

    • @UP4014
      @UP4014 4 года назад +1

      Lots of old factory equipment had it

    • @felixthecleaner8843
      @felixthecleaner8843 3 года назад +2

      hahahaha - rubbish!!

    • @mattharper588
      @mattharper588 3 года назад

      It is called machinery green paint

  • @tobyleach176
    @tobyleach176 4 года назад +122

    As far as the asbestos containing materials. Dont get too overwhelmed. As long as you aren't disturbing the materials you are perfectly safe. On the other hand if you beating or filing on the materials and creating a airborne particles. At that time you would be at risk for exposure. I've been working in indistrurial facilities for over 25 years. I find these fascinating especially the controls. I'm a industrial instrumentation tech. Some of that technobly is pre WW2 and very functional even in it's current state.

    • @outsideworld76
      @outsideworld76 4 года назад +11

      I work in the field of electronics but love to see old tech. The engineers in those days where so resourceful. To bad a lot of those arts are lost.

    • @EgonFreeman
      @EgonFreeman 3 года назад +4

      Thankfully, asbestos is a health risk in terms of _cumulative_ exposure. Inhaling a little of it for a few hours _once_ is probably fine. Still, nice to see them wearing masks, since if, say, half of the suspended ceiling came down, it possibly _could_ become a health issue down the line.

  • @worldofbrandan
    @worldofbrandan Год назад +4

    Every once in a while I find myself coming back and watching this video, you guys most likely got there at the right time as the plant is in the process of being torn down for redevelopment.

  • @infinitefibers1817
    @infinitefibers1817 Год назад +5

    I live down the road from this plant. I remember the clock being lit at night when we’d come home late from my grandparents. They’re starting to tear it down now. I know it’s old and has asbestos everywhere but it still makes me a little sad.

  • @thegrindeveryday9408
    @thegrindeveryday9408 4 года назад +138

    I read in an old manual for power plant managers that for the workers to be more productive the plant manager should consider keeping the plant well lit, painted to be aesthetically pleasing, and to practice good house keeping. The plant I work at practices none of those lol.

    • @brucecrutchfield3473
      @brucecrutchfield3473 4 года назад +11

      TheGrindeveryday
      I do hvac work for a power plant that was built in early 80’s and your right, it is nothing like this one. It’s hot, poorly lit, and coal dust gets in everything. In fact it’s quite depressing lmao.

    • @surreyscouse2873
      @surreyscouse2873 4 года назад +5

      The decommed plant in that film is cleaner and better lit than our working coal stations in this country.
      Oh and the paintwork even looks cleaner.

    • @KarinaMilne
      @KarinaMilne Год назад

      Waaay late to the comments here but - what year was that manual from???

  • @yettobseen
    @yettobseen 4 года назад +80

    Just beautiful. That’s America or at least the one I remember. This is a homage to what was, and what could have been. I can only imagine the pride and feelings of accomplishment the first employees felt. Should be a museum with a museum in it. It’s that incredible. Thanks so much guys!

    • @jeffbanfieldsflwr3537
      @jeffbanfieldsflwr3537 4 года назад +3

      Yea, when this was up and running. Im sure it was the place to work.

    • @sapyor
      @sapyor 4 года назад +4

      The American Empire. From greatness to destruction and oblivion. Fall of Empire.

    • @bsouth7042
      @bsouth7042 4 года назад +5

      @sapyor: Yeah right, as you sit there commenting via an American video-sharing website headquartered in San Bruno, California and invented by three American internet entrepreneurs using a global system of interconnected computers created by the United Stares. You should Google the word "ironic"

    • @yettobseen
      @yettobseen 4 года назад +7

      Bea South I should be impressed? I’m not even convinced of the comparison. We now live in a nothing society, no style, no character, no substance. That plant is America, our golden era has past. But if your of a certain age and more than 3rd generation, your clueless. Pitty

    • @RodFarva
      @RodFarva 4 года назад +2

      Except this is a Canadian power plant. Canada has decommissioned all their coal plants starting 15 years ago. They use mostly nuclear, nat gas and wind now

  • @molonlabe9635
    @molonlabe9635 4 года назад +296

    Here is a thought, how cool would it be if you could find somebody who use to work there, to walk you around and explain where everything was and what it did?

    • @devinhiggison1198
      @devinhiggison1198 4 года назад +1

      yess

    • @Ender.wigginn
      @Ender.wigginn 4 года назад +42

      YES. Though, most people who used to work there would probably be skittish about being on camera tresspassing at their old job. However, it would be cool of they started bringing a subject matter expert along on some of these industrial sites. An engineer or scientist, depending on the subject matter. Hell, even an architect when they explore some of the older mansions and homes.

    • @davidremy4470
      @davidremy4470 4 года назад +45

      You could do a post explore viewing with a former employee , that way their not trespassing, just commenting.

    • @dellahicks7231
      @dellahicks7231 4 года назад +8

      I was thinking that through the entire video! The human aspect for me, no matter the type of place the boys are exploring, is the vibe I enjoy most.
      Who were these, likely mostly men, did they have families, coach little league? So many questions!

    • @silentamarok7089
      @silentamarok7089 4 года назад +11

      Angelo Giovanni well am I glad it’s not the 50s anymore. Women aren’t men’s puppets or “objects” we are people too and I’ll be damned if I ever bow in submission to a man 😒

  • @mikefresca2758
    @mikefresca2758 4 года назад +94

    Your “whisk “ was a lightbulb changer lol. Lifesaver for when you can’t use a ladder.

    • @Tezcax
      @Tezcax 3 года назад +1

      Also, these old light bulbs got hot. Much better to use one of these than to burn your hands.

  • @maigistr
    @maigistr 4 года назад +245

    the power plants as usual are the most interesting in my opinion. love the colours in this one, hella aesthetic.

    • @yadoa3
      @yadoa3 4 года назад +5

      I never thumb up anything that has the word "hella" in it, because well frankly I just hate the word, but I agree so much with you that I have to break my rule and give you the thumbs up you deserve. +1

    • @kmpaton
      @kmpaton 4 года назад +2

      This reminds me of the Hoover Dam Hydroelectric Plant

    • @iHaveTheDocuments
      @iHaveTheDocuments 4 года назад +1

      @@yadoa3 Hella is cringe but " lit " is spirit destroying soul crushing cringe.

    • @dawnhasbroken6304
      @dawnhasbroken6304 4 года назад

      @@yadoa3 Hella yeah!

    • @scottcol23
      @scottcol23 Год назад

      @@iHaveTheDocuments Super old comment I know... BUT I share the same feelings about the work "Lit" and "Hella" I worked with a guy that from time to time would say "Oh that was Hella-Lit or Hella Dope" He also used the phrase "BooKoo" a lot. I digress.... Power plant videos are my favorite.

  • @sleepeasyrelax
    @sleepeasyrelax 4 года назад +31

    I have been watching since your first video and your art just gets better and better. Love the calm sensitivity and respect that you bring to all the places that you explore. All the Best from Australia.

  • @nene90047R1
    @nene90047R1 4 года назад +9

    I can’t imagine the amount of noise created into existence when this plant was in operation and how quiet it is now.
    Love it.

    • @JeffDeWitt
      @JeffDeWitt 4 года назад +4

      If you get a chance go to Hoover Dam and do a tour. While it's a hydro and not a steam plant the power room is even more amazing, and the sound of power in there is incredible.

    • @kimmer6
      @kimmer6 4 года назад +3

      The heat and noise is deafening. But the maintenance people could pick out odd abnormal sounds if something failed. Hearing protection is (was) a must. Laid up ships are even scarier and sound and probably are haunted. As far as Hoover Dam, that's 60 cycle hum and it sure means business.

  • @joshh8395
    @joshh8395 4 года назад +19

    Just a heads up, if your respirator is crushing your face it's on way too tight. If you do both a positive and negative air test and don't feel any leaks then you're good. (I'm a mold remediation specialist and wear those for 8+ hours a day 5 days a week) Love your videos! Thank you for the interesting tours

  • @valeniusthekat
    @valeniusthekat 4 года назад +237

    "Dumb ass graffiti", just one of the many reasons why I love you guys 💕😆
    And security guard geese 😂👍

    • @intheshadowofathousandbean563
      @intheshadowofathousandbean563 4 года назад +7

      valenius the kat Exactly, I really don't get why EVERY abandoned place has to be destroyed and covered in graffiti. I mean, I'm not against good graffiti but c'mon...

    • @valeniusthekat
      @valeniusthekat 4 года назад +9

      @@intheshadowofathousandbean563 art is one thing, graffiti is vandalism 👍

    • @crooklynx7828
      @crooklynx7828 3 года назад

      @@valeniusthekat Lol majority of the great artists in the past or today do or did graffiti with it being their introduction to art in the first place.. Interesting take.

  • @jenjay71
    @jenjay71 4 года назад +63

    I love hearing the howling of wind. Its creepy but cool.

    • @dellahicks7231
      @dellahicks7231 4 года назад

      Very creepy! Waiting for some hack explorer to plaster; 'Haunted Power Plant' with them in some goofy pose for their thumbnail, next to their video of this place!

    • @MasterCakeX5
      @MasterCakeX5 4 года назад

      The Witcher approves

    • @foreverNwonder
      @foreverNwonder 2 года назад

      23:52 I thought it was a cat howling or something haha that’s crazy

  • @boringpolitician
    @boringpolitician 4 года назад +25

    "Avoid breathing airborne asbestos fibers" - that's a good advice. It's a good thing they remind people of that, lest they forget it and start trying to breath in airborne asbestos fibres.

  • @edward135798642
    @edward135798642 4 года назад +60

    I weld stainless steel piping for general electric power plants, it's cool to see how it used to be done.

  • @TechBrosGamingChannel
    @TechBrosGamingChannel 4 года назад +196

    I love your power plant videos, they're my favorite videos you all do! I would love to see another nuclear power plant. Keep up the good work!

    • @TheSurvivalDude723
      @TheSurvivalDude723 4 года назад +6

      Omg yes those are amazinnggggggg

    • @Ender.wigginn
      @Ender.wigginn 4 года назад +9

      We probably won't see a nuclear power plant again. To find one in the stage of decommissioning they found that one in is rare, even rarer given how sparse security was. I think it was probably so loosely secured because of how secluded the site was. The NRC suspended most to all new plant projects after fugashima and states like CA are actively in the process of decommissioning their remaining plants. I'm surprised they didnt get in trouble with the DoD and DoE for that one.
      That being said, I too would love to see another nuclear power plant. I'm a physicist, if they needed/wanted someone to come along and explain some of the more esoteric stuff, I'd happily volunteer my services lol. The public has such a negative perception of nuclear power, which is a shame, because nuclear reactors are THE cleanest and least polluting sources of reliable energy we have 🤷‍♂️

    • @timfonteyne
      @timfonteyne 4 года назад +7

      @@Ender.wigginn was thinkimg the same! Some countries in europe are demolishing their nuclear powerplants, But instead they are building coal powerplants. It makes me very upset because they say it's "better" for the environment lol...

    • @caecium695
      @caecium695 4 года назад +3

      @@Ender.wigginn And where do you want to put all the nuclaer waste ?

    • @4rdF1Hunny
      @4rdF1Hunny 4 года назад +2

      @@Ender.wigginn This is true. Even the hardest left greenies realize this if they actually analyze the science and data of all the options.

  • @bad74maverick1
    @bad74maverick1 4 года назад +27

    That "whisk" is a light bulb remover. You attach it to multiple poles and you can unscrew lights without getting out a lift or tall ladders.

  • @Shane-Singleton
    @Shane-Singleton 4 года назад +3

    I love Mid Century art deco design. The machine age. that turbine hall really makes me happy. I'll bet it was an amazing sight, and quite the spectacle to behold when she went online for the first time back in the 40's.

  • @alexandretempleux6912
    @alexandretempleux6912 4 года назад +53

    9:56 that item is to change light bulb on a stick when they are prety out of reach

    • @gleaming999
      @gleaming999 4 года назад

      That would totally work in a Sci-Fi movie

  • @rolaroli
    @rolaroli 4 года назад +88

    Ooooh, another power plant! These are definitely my favourite videos to see. It's weird that big industrial places and power plants in these videos always make me anxious. Like it's wrong to even see them or something.
    Also that quote at the end was deep.

    • @Xenuos
      @Xenuos 4 года назад +2

      RUclips: Video uploaded 5 minutes ago.
      roli: hold my comment

    • @rolaroli
      @rolaroli 4 года назад +2

      Kai_T4 it’s called early access. Patreon and all that stuff.

    • @QuietJ0Y
      @QuietJ0Y 4 года назад +1

      roli thanks for supporting this awesome channel. I don’t patreon, but I do have a Polaroid

    • @Xenuos
      @Xenuos 4 года назад

      @@rolaroli yeah I'd patreon too if I could, this channel deserves more love

  • @ernestvattimo4755
    @ernestvattimo4755 4 года назад +3

    Great video, I worked in a coal plant for 40 years. It is now also shut down and abandoned. It was constructed around the same era. First unit on line in 1952. I wish someone would document iy before it gets demolished. Great work guys.

  • @mrsjennifersteele
    @mrsjennifersteele 4 года назад +7

    My mother would cry if she saw this plant. She was a electric power production specialist in the military in the 70s. I am going to show her your video! Thank you for another amazing upload!

  • @Cyba_IT
    @Cyba_IT 4 года назад +4

    Awesome vid as always guys. Man that plaque at the entrance summed up the pride and work ethic they had at the time. All of that engineering complexity and yet things were simpler back then. Not sure if it's technology to blame or everyone just wanting to make easy money or what but things sure have changed.

  • @ForgottenBuildings
    @ForgottenBuildings 4 года назад +53

    Great video! I absolutly love these old industrial buildings. You should go to poland one time, its absolutly full of old industrial buildings like powerplants and coal mines 😁

  • @liapete13
    @liapete13 4 года назад +4

    The reason why I love your video documentaries is this. Thank you for giving respect to these monuments of energy, the life blood of our lives. Indeed, these places won’t be around long, as God isn’t creating more land. This forgotten place like others, is memorialized in your work.

  • @worlddomin623
    @worlddomin623 4 года назад +2

    Videos of places like these are so important. You guys are really capturing on film the last major remnants of this country's original industrial heritage, when men built things that were incredible and to be proud of, and were built to stand the test of time. That era is over, and I don't think that it will come about ever again anywhere in the world.
    Thanks again.

  • @AiMR
    @AiMR 4 года назад +2

    This structure is the work of an architect who took pride in aesthetics as well as function. I'm sure there were many other architects who submitted ideas, but when people saw these drawings they recognized its beauty.

  • @cjgreenmun5339
    @cjgreenmun5339 4 года назад +99

    This plant is in really good shape for an abandoned building.

    • @wetlettuce4768
      @wetlettuce4768 4 года назад +4

      Must be active security patrols scaring away the scrappers.

    • @Urbicide
      @Urbicide 4 года назад +28

      The plant hasn't been shut down for too many years. This coal fired plant was one of many closed down by the Obama administration's EPA. These plants produced inexpensive electrical power for their customers.

    • @dellahicks7231
      @dellahicks7231 4 года назад +1

      I was thinking the same, though some areas have clearly been vandalized, so much remains in pretty good shape!

    • @SteveVi0lence
      @SteveVi0lence 4 года назад +19

      @@Urbicide damn obama. Affordable energy for the local community and decent well paying jobs. Gone. I was thinking the same thing about it.

    • @SteveVi0lence
      @SteveVi0lence 4 года назад +1

      I think it might be the one in CT on its own little island

  • @maksymushka
    @maksymushka 4 года назад +3

    Thanks for paging through that turbine manual. It's great seeing something that's been lost and abandoned resurfacing somewhere on the internet. You guys are keeping the memories of these places alive. Thank you!

  • @jaydavidson4592
    @jaydavidson4592 4 года назад +2

    It's really something else to see a place of work that is now totally abandoned. All the people who worked there, the experiences they had. That place is like a huge still portrait of mystery, with a bit of sadness

    • @kimmer6
      @kimmer6 4 года назад

      I was a Field Engineer for GE in the 70's and 80's and saw some abandoned power plants. But the spookiest things ever are derelict ships. We had to board a few to locate some obsolete bearing or seal and they have string lights inside with dim bulbs every 40 feet or so. Ships creak, bang, thump, moan, and sound haunted. The Austral Moon tied up at Hunter's Point in San Francisco shook me the most. The Chief Engineer left his coffee, cinnamon roll, and cigarette there on his desk and stopped writing in the log book mid sentence 3 months before. Everyone just left and never came back.

  • @ExplorewithSvetlin
    @ExplorewithSvetlin 4 года назад +22

    +1 for using exactly the right protection!

  • @Thisissarah815
    @Thisissarah815 4 года назад +4

    Your passion for these otherwise forgotten places shows. You actually cared and were angry about about the f**ckbags who vandalized it. So glad somebody appreciates the building's history. And one of my favorite parts of a building is the staircase too

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill 4 года назад +3

    I love the fact that y'all go to explore these places simply to appreciate old architecture or just for the joy of exploration -- never to vandalize or steal. I really respect y'all for that. Plus the videos, in general, are just so fascinating. I'm so glad I discovered this channel.

  • @lavapix
    @lavapix 4 года назад +44

    I've worn those masks for 8-10 hours straight while at volcanic vents. Yes, they get uncomfortable and full of snot but they do save your health for sure.

  • @3lis3A
    @3lis3A 4 года назад +14

    You guys have such a good eye for film and photography. You create beautiful art, and I really appreciate it!

  • @EdwardBrackstoneFilms
    @EdwardBrackstoneFilms 4 года назад +10

    You guys seriously make the best content on RUclips proper urbex content no click bait garbage always get mad hyped when uploads come out thanks guys for the amazing videos

    • @morganrussman
      @morganrussman 4 года назад

      I understand from someone who commented on one of my videos that I didn't click bait either. Coarse, I think that was months ago, but still.

  • @graemedavidson499
    @graemedavidson499 4 года назад +31

    Excellent explore. It always amazes me how much instrumentation is in a power plant. I fear the aesthetic design of industrial plant nowadays is a dying art.

    • @uuuultra
      @uuuultra 4 года назад

      Graeme Davidson, the aesthetic phrase is thrown around too much these days

  • @joeybarrelwilde
    @joeybarrelwilde 4 года назад +17

    I can just imagine how loud that place must have been when operating. Hearing protection was a must.

    • @bildo85
      @bildo85 4 года назад

      Turbines aren't as loud as you think.

  • @BlueSky...
    @BlueSky... 4 года назад +5

    To know what to do is . . . Wisdom
    To know how to do it is . . . Skill
    To do the thing as it should be done is
    . . . SERVICE . . .

  • @gothempress
    @gothempress 4 года назад +10

    You will be happy to know they are making conservation efforts for this place. It just is taking a while b/c of all the asbestos.

    • @BlueSky...
      @BlueSky... 2 года назад +1

      I would love to hear more about such efforts.

  • @ec8107
    @ec8107 4 года назад +16

    Awesome, I used to work in a coal fired plant of the same size and vintage. The turbine generators, the Hear Here booths, yellow brick tile...all the same. I would have liked to see the coal pulverizers. With 6 units, there would have been 18 to 24 pulverizers in the basement. Also your approach to asbestos is correct. If it isn't marked non asbestos, it's PACM. Presumed Asbestos Containing Materials.
    Edit: spelling

    • @michaeloram6957
      @michaeloram6957 4 года назад

      I know you're saying I did that plant was a waste was coal boilers have been changed the oil burners if they did that those generators would run again it's a damn shame to see them like that what a waste

    • @roadchewerpe5759
      @roadchewerpe5759 4 года назад

      Is the coal pulverized I assume to increase the surface area to in turn burn the coal faster?

    • @ec8107
      @ec8107 4 года назад +2

      @@roadchewerpe5759 pulverizers crush the coal to a talcum powder consistency. There are fans that blow hot air from the boiler(few hundred degrees Fahrenheit) through the pulverizer. This air/coal mixture travels through pipes to the boiler where it is ignited. The pulverizers in this plant were probably originally ball and race style. Think large ball bearings that crush coal as they spin.

    • @natet7482
      @natet7482 4 года назад +2

      @@ec8107 they were roller mills. 3 per boiler. The primary air in this setup was provided by the FD fans from the boiler air casing, no dedicated blower. I worked at this plant as an operator for quite a few years.

    • @natet7482
      @natet7482 4 года назад +1

      @@roadchewerpe5759 that is correct, increase surface area and the burn efficiency goes way up. This coal was burnt in suspension in these particular boilers, meaning it was blown is at the corners on the and burned in the furnace suspended from the floor. I worked at this plant.

  • @kellyshaw5428
    @kellyshaw5428 4 года назад +2

    I love those old tourist brochures. I really like how you threw in the bit about them fantasizing about vacationing there, it really adds a genuine realness in such a surreal place. It humanizes the plant in a way. Well done as always Proper People!

  • @michaelclark2097
    @michaelclark2097 4 года назад +17

    These videos always make my damn weekend. When I come home from work, this is the first thing I watch.

  • @nozzzzy
    @nozzzzy 4 года назад +12

    This is by far my favorite channel on RUclips. I hope you never run out of amazing places to visit.

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow98 4 года назад +7

    I live 75 miles from Snoqualmie Falls. Seeing that brochure was like "Hey! I know that place!" for me.

    • @skinnypete22
      @skinnypete22 4 года назад +1

      Yea I saw that and now I'm curious where that powerplant is.

  • @Ilovevintage77
    @Ilovevintage77 4 года назад +2

    I love how your videos have become more like short films with smooth narration mood appropriate music and much more steady filming plus I love when you share background history. I also really love when you show colmon things like bathrooms light fixtures glass bottles telephones floor tiles and windows etc.

  • @valeniusthekat
    @valeniusthekat 4 года назад +8

    That turbibe blade assembly is just fascinating!
    And all the other mechanics of it all 😍👍

  • @Epicdude200
    @Epicdude200 4 года назад +179

    There's nothing wrong with asbestos. My grandfather worked around asbestos for 65 years and had no problems, granted, it took 4 days to cremate him but still

  • @MikaelGranqvist
    @MikaelGranqvist 4 года назад +7

    Those dark, ambient synths really makes this video an 11/10! Well done!

    • @pokerdealer2003
      @pokerdealer2003 4 года назад +1

      Mikael Granqvist I sit and watch vids and re work them with my synths love it, good ear

  • @TheExplorerReturns
    @TheExplorerReturns 4 года назад +17

    Amazing video as always lads, always brings a smile to my face when I get a notification saying you uploaded. Top explorers❤️

  • @bramvandenbroeck5060
    @bramvandenbroeck5060 3 года назад +2

    10:38 imagine if this plant was still open, and you apply for a job opening, and the supervisor told you to read 5 of those books, just to make sure you understand those custom build turbines and generators! I would go insane :P

  • @pling501
    @pling501 4 года назад +7

    4:08 These are direct current generators that create the initial supplementary excitation magnetic field in the generating turbine to then provide brushless excitation generation of power. Really cool video!

  • @Acousticeg
    @Acousticeg 4 года назад +6

    I always wait impatiently for your next adventure. I enjoy your videos immensely. And the fact that you neither destroy or steal anything. The only thing you leave are footprints. Thanks for sharing.

  • @xj1490
    @xj1490 4 года назад +23

    “You’re walking in asbestos”
    “Yea”

  • @JapanPop
    @JapanPop 4 года назад +1

    For kids of the 80s, such modernist structures are a piece of the homespace of our minds. Fun to visit the past.

  • @NoNegotiations
    @NoNegotiations 4 года назад +12

    Imagine that people had to engineer and build this. Holy cow.

  • @OfficialiGamer
    @OfficialiGamer 4 года назад +5

    this was awesome! Loved it! Absolutely adore the Art Deco Style, sad to see such craftmanship crumbling and rusting away! despite all the vandalism, I am glad to see that they weren't completely destructive, most of the dials and equipment are undamaged! Keep up the amazing work guys!

  • @optisonics
    @optisonics 4 года назад +8

    The railings throughout are beautiful examples of deco. Some builder should salvage these and use them in a new project.

  • @OAleathaO
    @OAleathaO 4 года назад +5

    23:49 - "The wind in here sounds crazy..." Imagine hearing that in that room at night with no lights. Gives me the shivers just thinking about it. ;)

    • @Salman-sc8gr
      @Salman-sc8gr 4 года назад

      A taste of the after life dear

  • @MolotovSandvich97
    @MolotovSandvich97 4 года назад +8

    I live near here...
    Update: Just explored it (one hour ago, actually) and it's just as mindblowing in person as it is in this video. Great work guys, I love your stuff.

    • @jacobagee3755
      @jacobagee3755 4 года назад +1

      Molotov are you located in lower Ohio?

    • @aaronarmstrong9776
      @aaronarmstrong9776 Год назад

      I think I live close to it too. Is it close to a baseball field names after food?

    • @aaronarmstrong9776
      @aaronarmstrong9776 Год назад

      @@jacobagee3755 yooo dog

    • @Kikbakgamezyt
      @Kikbakgamezyt Год назад

      @@aaronarmstrong9776yeah it’s currently being tore down

    • @Kikbakgamezyt
      @Kikbakgamezyt Год назад

      @@aaronarmstrong9776if I knew a good way to get in to explore it now I would during the day there are people there working then at night no one they used to have security there

  • @valeniusthekat
    @valeniusthekat 4 года назад +17

    @16:40ish.... Turn that shot on its side and it looks like a futuristic city 👀👍

  • @hollyreed5024
    @hollyreed5024 4 года назад +1

    If this is where I think it is. That clock on the building worked and was the right time until the very last day of operation. So neat to get to see inside after all the years of just passing it. Im happy you guys do your best to keep locations secret to help deter vandals. Its sad what humans can do to a place.

  • @danielb6814
    @danielb6814 4 года назад +1

    We began watching your videos nearly two years ago with the sneaking into nuclear power plant episode. This is now my favorite. I love abandoned power plants as well as art deco architecture. Great footage and narration. Thank you!

  • @nigel0001
    @nigel0001 4 года назад +33

    New 'the proper people' upload! Have we won the lottery? No but this is very close.

  • @paulpence8895
    @paulpence8895 4 года назад +4

    Hands down, you guys just put out kick ass content, stay safe and keep them coming!!!

  • @charlieb9502
    @charlieb9502 4 года назад +1

    Pure and simple, This power plant was made when craftsmen and engineers had pride in their work.
    That cared about what they were doing and had an ethic for leaving a legacy more than making $$$.
    Something that is not thought of today.
    There are very few true craftsmen.

    • @Urbicide
      @Urbicide 4 года назад +2

      We now live in a disposable society. Instead of fixing things, we throw them away & buy new.

  • @WilliamButcher4455
    @WilliamButcher4455 4 года назад +1

    The amount of small intricate electronics and pipes are amazing. You would have never thought of a relatively simple powerplant to have something this complex

  • @areyoujelton
    @areyoujelton 4 года назад +3

    You guys are definitely one of my all time favorite channels. Never get tired of seeing your stuff. ⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @moparedtn
    @moparedtn 4 года назад +4

    Well done, gentlemen. The book you were checking out was the plants' "O&M" (Operation and Maintenance) manual. You were correct in stating it was specifically for that plants' application.
    The quote on the large placard at the end of the video is known as "The Ushers' Motto". Some who have attended services in a Baptist church will recognize it, but it's very much applicable to life in general.
    The last part left out of the quote refers to "pure service" as being the most noble thing a man can do.
    Also very true.

  • @ginormousbones
    @ginormousbones 4 года назад +1

    So glad you guys are documenting these gems. Kudos to you! Thanks

  • @andrewadkins5622
    @andrewadkins5622 2 года назад +1

    Been watching your guys' content for a while and just noticed this video. Thanks for making this! My grandfather worked here for years as a stationary engineer and was a volunteer firefighter. I'll have to show my grandmother this. Sad that they're going to be demolishing it. My mom watched the moon landings in the small guard post by the gate when she was young. Place looks surreal at night.

  • @Gypsy839
    @Gypsy839 4 года назад +21

    Wow looks like they just up and left right now! Except for the broken glass.

    • @uuuultra
      @uuuultra 4 года назад +1

      Connie Miner, the broken glass is likely from vandals

    • @Gypsy839
      @Gypsy839 4 года назад

      I know!

  • @Gabrielogomess
    @Gabrielogomess 4 года назад +6

    Power plant and rainy weather damn The Aesthetics are strong on this one!

  • @czardalan
    @czardalan 4 года назад +2

    What a beautiful industrial site! Thank you so much for sharing this. Some of the shots of rain pouring down and when you walk inside the control panels are deeply emotional and truly cinematic, like those scenes found in the Ghost in the Shell and Bladerunner movies. And cheers up for crawling into those respirators. Take care and stay safe with those hazardous dusts...

  • @mjarbar3204
    @mjarbar3204 4 года назад

    Just wanted to say many thanks for this video and bringing back some fantastic memories of me and my dad. My dad worked for General Electric at the Basildon, UK facility during the 1970's and 80's and as a kid I would sometimes go there and he would take me out on the shop floor where the turbines from ships and power stations would be brought from across the UK and parts of Europe to be refurbished and have the blades replaced, realigned and rebalanced which was done by a lot of very talented people by hand. It was truly something to see, some of the turbines even when on their side were still up to 2 stories tall.

  • @Insomniac_03
    @Insomniac_03 4 года назад +27

    The plant I work at(General Motors in Pontiac, MI) still has & uses one of those “Chamber of secrets” sinks in one of the bathrooms upstairs.

    • @bubba99009
      @bubba99009 4 года назад +5

      I used one in school. Totally forgot about those. I'll take it over one of the modern touchless faucets that don't work half the time any day.

    • @Urbicide
      @Urbicide 4 года назад +1

      You didn't touch those industrial sinks with your hands! There was a valve that you turned by stepping on a lever with your foot. Those sinks were designed for scrubbing serious grime off of your arms.

    • @mlfett6307
      @mlfett6307 4 года назад +3

      We had them in school as well (with the foot bar)

    • @robertmanley7556
      @robertmanley7556 4 года назад

      The john deere plant I work in we still have 3 left a true part of history as well

    • @goofyleo3869
      @goofyleo3869 4 года назад +1

      My D-Day surviving Uncle made one into an outside fountain on his back patio when the remodeled the bathrooms at his company.

  • @tobyleach176
    @tobyleach176 4 года назад +3

    Books you were referring to about the control system. Those were operator manuals for the vibration monitoring systems. I've worked with many of those in the past. They can measure vibration along with thrust and use key phasers to measure rotational speed. That condition monitoring system can be used to monitor the rotating equipment and give key indicators to when it might need major overhaul type of work. Pretty critical stuff and that brand "Bently Nevada" is the best product in the market for that. Surprised it was just abandoned, there is a big demand for aftermarket equipment like that. Great find.

  • @jasonburly1590
    @jasonburly1590 3 года назад

    Plants like this one have powered peoples lives for generations and deserve to be preserved and shared. Thanks for the chances you take getting footage that allows the rest of us to explore these places too.

  • @UNNAM3D82
    @UNNAM3D82 4 года назад +2

    8:45 This is scene with the rain coming down is by far my favorite one out of the whole video. I wish you guys would include more moody shots like that!

  • @galaxytamer
    @galaxytamer 4 года назад +8

    that shot at 16:45 reminds me of some kinda complicated apartment building in a dreary futuristic industrial universe. love it
    edit: and that BOILER ROOM lookin like a feral ghoul is gonna pop out at you guys any moment

  • @ct5625
    @ct5625 4 года назад +3

    Old power stations are amazing. As you might imagine, we have a few of them in the UK, big and small, and we work hard to restore or find uses for them. Battersea Power Station is perhaps the most famous, it's now being redeveloped. Bankside power station is now the Tate Modern in London, with massive spaces for art and performance. There are a few smaller stations privately owned and converted into homes and offices too, but as almost all of them are listed and protected so everything has to be approved to maintain their features and aesthetics wherever possible. TBH, if you're buying an old power station, you're probably doing it for the aesthetics anyway and want to preserve it. It's a shame we're not investing in modern architecture in the same way we used to, everything we're throwing up now is cheap and temporary in comparison.

  • @Legitlyyy
    @Legitlyyy 4 года назад +2

    I just realized where you explored. It's such an amazing place inside and out, thank you for letting the rest of the world see it!

  • @TheScarletteWhisper
    @TheScarletteWhisper 4 года назад +1

    Wow guys, awesome video. The detail you share in both the history/descriptions of the place itself and the shots while exploring are just excellent. The different angles and cinematic shots are very well done. Thanks for such a great video and for all the effort. 👍

  • @FlyboyEmert58
    @FlyboyEmert58 4 года назад +5

    At 3:53 you can see an ITE KA Slate-back breaker. It normally resides inside the greenish-metal cabinets. As seen, it's in the "racked out" or "disconnected" position and one of it's arc chutes is missing. On the back side is a set of metal "fingers" that grab onto the metal bars in the back that carry the voltage when energized. The beauty of it was that it could be "drawn-out" and worked on easily, or lifted out of it's cradle and replaced with another unit. What makes it special is the very first circuit breaker to ever use an inverse-time element to operate a large switch to protect people and equipment from overcurrent caused by ground faults, short-circuits, and overload. The circuit breakers in your house panel are just a scaled down version of this beast. Really cool to see!

  • @daviddpg
    @daviddpg 4 года назад +3

    You guys get better with each video. Awesome stuff thanks for the effort.

  • @Funnydog123456
    @Funnydog123456 4 года назад +2

    You guys are my favorite channel on youtube. Straight up

  • @MattyMatt80
    @MattyMatt80 4 года назад +2

    When I can’t sleep I binge watch the hell out of all your videos!!!! Amazing content in this video! Love the power plant and factory videos!!

  • @TruthNTime
    @TruthNTime 4 года назад +8

    I love your exploration of old industrial sites but what I love even more is when you explore hospitals, sanitariums and asylums, those by far are the creepiest and most interesting in my opinion. Seeing all the old equipment and apparatuses and the conditions in which the mentally ill used to be committed is really barbaric and makes you think damn, they had it bad with all the experimentation in that field at the time essentially being guinea pigs for those psychopaths, but keep rockin it guys and we'll keep watching it.
    URBEX ON Gentleman !

    • @Budaboose
      @Budaboose 4 года назад

      We're all Guinea pigs now, worse than ever. People just don't realize it but we are. It's not an accident that cancer just keeps going up and up and up. Cancer in children was almost unheard of until modern times. The psychopaths you speak of were only working for us. Now people are using technology you can't even imagine that's in use right now on everyone.

    • @TruthNTime
      @TruthNTime 4 года назад +1

      Andrew J Whoa! Pump the brakes kid, you're all over the place and off topic. By the way there's been a Cure for cancer since the 40's brother, And I'm not quite sure what you mean when you say that psychopaths were working for us? The psychiatric doctors that worked back in the day we're not doing research for us, they were quite literally mad men who had a free ticket to experiment on humans to see what the results would be , do some more research you're preaching to the choir here.

    • @TruthNTime
      @TruthNTime 4 года назад +1

      Oh, btw, Alex Jones Is controlled opposition bro, people in the truth movement left that clown behind about a decade ago. now that I see you watch info wars you have a lot to learn my friend... Have a good one, get back to me when you shed that shill...

  • @Mattboy300
    @Mattboy300 4 года назад +8

    Imagine taking ownership of a facility like this and taking the time to read through all the manuals, repair all the tech and clean up everything back to fully working condition. Would make for a great RUclips series.

    • @earthsoul4206
      @earthsoul4206 4 года назад

      Mattboy300 omggggg that would be brilliant. I'd follow it religiously.

  • @discountvacationrentals
    @discountvacationrentals 4 года назад

    One of the best of your vids imho! Wisdom, skill and service all over this tour! Thx!

  • @adejupe8308
    @adejupe8308 4 года назад

    You guys are the BEST Urbex team EVER!!! I LOVE your videos!!! You take us right along with you, it feels like we're there with you. Take nothing but photographs, leave nothing but footprints.
    God I love you guys!!! Much respect from the UK

  • @adamstoudt2401
    @adamstoudt2401 4 года назад +3

    This has to be the best one. Of the videos I seen along with the blast furnace video.

  • @dondavis5633
    @dondavis5633 4 года назад +5

    Guys, have you ever thought of flying your Proper Copter in a large hall like this? I can only imagine the amazing shots you'd get!

    • @TheProperPeople
      @TheProperPeople  4 года назад +2

      We'd have to fly it without GPS which we aren't very good at.

  • @RichTheNoun
    @RichTheNoun 4 года назад +1

    Wow, great work. You guys are true professionals. I’d say that you deserve your own TV show if I didn’t think that television was a dying media.
    I especially loved the end where you read the text from that plaque to the music and changing scenes. Gave me chills.

  • @billbaker9623
    @billbaker9623 4 года назад +1

    Wonderful episode guys. Good call on Twin Peaks. Try not to confuse Art Deco with Mid Century Modern. They both have evocative looks that will never again be reproduced, but they are completely different. Really appreciate the way you guys have matured over the years which has led to more interesting videos.

    • @TheProperPeople
      @TheProperPeople  4 года назад +1

      Yea we're aware this style isn't really Art Deco, just something that evolved out of it. But we went with Art Deco since that is a term that most people are familiar with and it fits in the title better. I think technically this building would have been Streamline Moderne. The front facade of the office section was textbook Streamline Moderne, the turbine hall less so but it still had many elements of it.

    • @billbaker9623
      @billbaker9623 4 года назад +1

      @@TheProperPeople No matter what you call it it was a cool building. Thanks for the tour.