Arab Times

Urbexers time-travel thru Berlin’s lost places

‘Urban explorers’ seek out abandoned places

-

BERLIN, July 29, (AFP): With its deserted bunkers, abandoned barracks and ghostly hospital ruins, Berlin is a magnet for urban explorers who seek out abandoned places and time-travel through the German capital’s Cold War past.

“It’s amazing, I’ve never seen so many people,” said ‘Urbex’ veteran Ciaran Fahey during a visit to an overgrown and graffitico­vered former children’s hospital in what was once communist East Berlin.

Two dozen thrill-seeking visitors — Germans, Russians, Latvians — were gingerly stepping over shattered glass, bricks and piles of rubble in the dilapidate­d, partially burnt and slightly haunting complex.

Abandoned in 1991, it is nicknamed the “zombie hospital” after one of the hundreds of murals on its cob-webbed corridors and dank former patient wards, now occasional­ly used by partying youths and homeless people.

Like other “lost places”, it is potentiall­y dangerous and officially off limits, meaning visitors trespass as they enter through a hole in the chain link fence while they keep a nervous eye out for authoritie­s.

Berlin city official Eva Henkel said police take a dim view of such urban adventures, that visitors enter illegally and at their own risk.

“If you have any brains at all, you don’t go in there,” she said.

To Urbexers, this is as enticing as a holiday brochure, and the hospital is firmly on their Berlin sightseein­g map.

Fahey, an Irish-born longtime Berlin resident, knows such lost places better than most, having lovingly photograph­ed and described them in his blog and photo book, both called “Abandoned Berlin”.

The trend took off after the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall opened up a vast hinterland, replete with former Nazi bunkers, Soviet army barracks, shuttered red-brick factories and even an old fun-fair with rides and replica dinosaurs.

As the East German economy collapsed and the country reunified, these places were left to the ravages of weather and time.

Over a quarter-century on, as a property boom has remade the face of the city, the Urbex fashion has caught fire, with ever more explorers searching out ever fewer abandoned places.

The movement is global, with hotspots from Melbourne to Detroit, and sometimes dubbed “roof-and-tunnel hacking”. A Google search for “urbex” nets more than seven million hits.

“Interest has exploded in recent years, it is becoming more and more popular,” said Fahey.

The movement’s unspoken code is: take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints.

Inside the “zombie hospital”, Max and Mila, two young Latvians, were walking under caved-in ceilings, dead lamp fittings dangling precarious­ly from overhead wires, and admiring a vast gallery of urban street art.

To many the nerve-tingling trips have a flavour of post-apocalypti­c tourism. Max said it was fascinatin­g to witness “how nature has taken over”.

Where there is a trend, private business is quick to follow, and several Berlin operators now offer tours for paying guests.

One takes the curious up a wooded hill in the former West Berlin, to a graffiti-covered Cold War-era listening post of the US National Security Agency (NSA).

For years, rave parties were held under its tattered geodesic domes, which loom like giant golf balls atop Teufelsber­g (Devil’s Hill), a mound made of World War II rubble.

Such tours offer “authorised and secure” access and allow everyone “to feel the fascinatio­n of these places”, said Andreas Boettger, co-founder of operator Go2know.

As early Urbex pioneers, he said the company could understand that purists object to such for-profit tours.

But he said these also helped preserve old sites, “an ideology shared by many hobby photograph­ers, history buffs and other interested people”.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait