Electricians Abandoned Cabin (Summer Revisit) After Bankrupt Renovation
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- čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
- Original video • Cabin In The Woods Aft...
: Exploring Abandoned Anything can be dangerous or Deadly without experience. I don't encourage anyone to enter any Abandoned structure. Not only is safety a concern, but often times it's illegal and when possible, i seek out permission from the owner or local police. I simply go to document its history before it's gone forever and leave things the way I find them. I only take pictures a only leave footprints. I assume all the risks & responsibility before doing this. Please don't attempt to do this on your own. Their could be nails, Asbestos, Falling concrete soft floors, animals or other hazards. Thanks for Watching
"I do not weigh 10s of thousands of pounds". New favorite post 10 quote.
I live in East EU and I can learn so much things about the US, about environmental details. Even the most insifgnificant things&stuff will be interesting and meaningful when Post talks about them with his amazing expertise!
I’m the same. I hate seeing useful and cool things wasted. It drives me nuts. I’d want to save a lot of those vintage appliances, repurpose one or two pieces of that old furniture, etc.
This whole video makes me sad. But it is still very interesting to hear Post talk about all the little details he notices.
yeah same here bro. Especially these days. You could use most of that stuff at a radio station. it will come in useful.
12:48 "Still got toilet paper, no one stole it last year" LOL
Post 10 absolutely roasting the electricians/ roofers/ and carpenters that attempted this monstrosity is exactly what I needed today
Most vintage hunters would die to a one of those old stoves.
Those aren’t beehives my friend, those are wasp nests. As a former beekeeper I twitch when one is conflated for the other, bees catch a lot of blame for wasps.
When I saw that cookie tin I thought "Some granny's sewing kit!". 😂
Love the farmhouse sink.
Love the pine paneling.
Love the bathroom sink.
Weird how people just walk away without taking their belongs. Haunted-like.
How sad. Broken dreams and dashed hope.
Maybe they wanted a big breaker box to run there moonshine still, that would explain the build quality.
Another good video, really like your exploring abandoned videos, your very respectful to the places.
A lot of others hear on CZcams can learn a lot from you.
Keep them coming.
It's shocking how many of today's building materials are basically thick cardboard. It's insane.
We can partially blame zoning laws that emphasize construction of new single-family homes. These drive searches for cheaper material to meet demand.
This isn't even from nowadays. We were investigating about the age of the building in the last video based on the magazines and stuff inside and got to the conclusion that it must have been built around 1985-1989. The house, not the new foundation
@@RNCHFND Cheap materials have been around forever, it's only getting worse. I even have original pressboard sheathing on my house built around 1948.
Thats cause the testosterone levels in the west are so low. Instead of brick its thick cardboard or styrofoam
@@letitrotfuckit 😂
Sure is a shame that the structure will end up on the ground in 5 years, SMH we don't know the full particulars of why it got abandoned but whoever set the foundation damn sure doesn't know how to read a tape measure or how to set block, best thing for the building would be to salvage whatever can be saved then tear it down completely and start from scratch imo
Yes, interesting, second time watching. Saddened for the family, looks like it would have been their dream home.
I love when you explore abandoned places.
Same.
I'm here so early, the video still smells fresh. Let's go on another adventure.
I remember seeing this place from the unfinished heated floor. Sad the house move didn't work out. At least a person can sit on a sofa in the basement and spin some vinyl. What more do ya' need?
If the homeowner wasn't a electrician they might have been one of those homeowners that like to go to flea markets and get a whole lot of old electrical stuff and say use this to do your rough in because they think it will save them money.
I'm from Italy, and I'm amazed how bad US houses are built. But still love your videos man. Stay safe and don't put yourself in danger
Yeah,
But they are easy to fix.
This is not what a typical American home looks like lmao.
Yeah America has a problem. Unfortunately other countries are copying it. In Russia we still use brick and concrete blocks and also logs. greetings from Russia comrade.
Its worse now. They literally have styrofoam and clap board with stucko over the styrofoam so it looks nice.
@@letitrotfuckit There is certainly a fair share of poor quality construction but you guys overseas really get a hilariously one sided portrayal of how we live. The town I live in is almost entirely comprised of brick buildings and American cities were almost exclusively brick for some time.
The cheap construction is just a symptom of having alot of undeveloped space, somthing western Europe has almost none of and Eastern Europe tends to fill with undeveloped villages.
Not trying to be confrontational but Europeans should understand our countries have very different curcumstances and land valuations. There's a reason why this shoddy work is in the middle of a Forrest abandoned. You don't see stuff like this in Boston or burbs
This is what happens when you cheap out or you don't know what you are doing. Too bad for the house. Wonder how much longer this will be standing.Thanks for sharing and stay safe.
I hate to see abandoned houses...I always think of broken dreams.
That living room would’ve been so beautiful! Such a shame it didn’t get taken care of in the right way
So caring and considerate for the spider at the end
Be carefull, mr 10! Tics & mosquitoes: Gotta love 10's curiosity.
Wow that place was just one huge mistake after another, they couldn't have had much experience in building work which is a shame because if it was built correctly it would have made a nice home. Thank you for sharing, much love. xx 💖
Have you ever came across someone hiding or living in an abandoned place that you have explored. Anyway keep these awesome vids coming and i'll contiue to watch em all.
not a human but a raccoon made me leave once. it started walking towards me it slowly with its back arched to scare me away
The one time two of my friends were exploring an abandoned house in England just outside the west side of London. We ran into this guy who was wearing a tarp about 50's or so. After hearing that we were just exploring, he invited us closer for cup of tea.
We politely declined and turned and briskly walked right out of there!
He could have simply been mad and genuinely offering us teens some tea. But we knew better then to risk it. The place was demolished back in the late 90's, just a year or two after we had attempted to explore it.
Post 1 notification comes up
“EVERYTHING” else can wait ! 😆♥️😂
Once upon a time people laughed and people cried. If only those wall's could talk
I like that you revisit these places. Your observations and analysis are excellent and corroborated in doing so. Thanks for doing these.
FYI - what you think is particle board is probably OSB (Oriented strand board). OSB is not particle board, and is very strong and a good option to replace regular plywood in many applications.
Love the videos!
Someone need to save some of the lights fixtures and some of those tables
Such a pleasant diversion from the rest of the shite goin' on in the world right now. Keep doing what you do best Post 10! ☘☘
What a shame, that was probably someone’s dream home. Very interesting and thanks for taking us along on the ride.
Exploring is always nice and thrilling.
Be careful, post 10, I feel anxiety just by watching the video, because the structure is clearly unstable and close to collapse. But very interesting video, as usual, thanks!
if winter didn't take it down with tens of thousands of pounds of snow I highly doubt I could if I tried
Can't believe that place is still standing. Thanks for the re-visit! 😊
That was a potential grow site bub - those 'recessed lights' you had mounted on the Ballast. Prob what the basement was for and extra juicy panel / basement plumbing.
Maybe they got busted before they could prosper.
You don’t give yourself enough credit for all that you know. You know a lot more than most!!
Built brand new, to appear as an early American abandon housing! We build them to fail! 100% guaranteed to fall in, at the first strong breeze! Used as movie set, to represent a bombed out building! (g)
LOVE YOUR CHANNEL!! It’s my absolute fave ! Love learning all new facts/information from you!! And love all of your adventures!! You bring out the little kid in me (: so thank you!! And keep being you!
POST-apocalypse luxury cabin. That breaker box was hilariously oversized. This place was the ultimate Frankenstein house. I’ve got the same exact green tile in my apartment bathroom in LA that was built in the 1920s (golden era Hollywood architecture).
i love a basement with a door on the floor. opens to a sub basement.. break out the floor jack and start fixing this place.
BTW, usually with places like this, it was old man who died/got too old and was put into a nursing home before they could find the project.
Well I'm really impressed by all your comments during this tour! Very insightful! You sound like a cross between the professor on Gilligan's Island and Columbo. I look forward to Future tours.
Over here they are rebuilding some abandoned buildings and houses
That’s great! At least these old buildings won’t be lost. But we agree that this one is beyond repairs? This place should be demolished ASAP before it hurts anyone.
Great video thanks. Chris from England 🏴
It is a damn shame. Thar was a super cute house that someone really loved at one point.
It's to bad someone doesn't know how to measure!!!! I bet that house would have been nice.
Thanks for taking us along.
That knob and tube wiring really ain’t that bad , it’s how Freddy Kilowatt spliced into it that made it dangerous
It's a shame to see that house go to waste .❤✌
There must be a tragic story behind that place.
Great video Post! You do all the exploring that most people have forgotten about. Love your videos thanks for sharing
The livingroom walls are nice. Just think if the whole house was done like that.
Thanks for sharing
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
I noticed there was still toilet paper, too!
I think there were too many costly mistakes so they just abandoned it. They must of been trying to do most of the work by themselves.
Based on the metric/imperial converter, massive fluorecsent lights in the basement, and the three phase electricity, I guess the guy was a turner, welder, or did milling, etc...The water heater was 2 kW, 6 gals.
Did the stove show a name: Glenwood? Glenwood was the name of the ole tyme kitchen wood stoves.
Really interesting old building. 💚💚
Careful of those ticks Post10! Nothing worse than shoddy workmanship!
in this area deer ticks have a 40% chance of carrying Lyme disease but they must be attached to you for at least 24 hours to transmit the disease but the majority of the ticks I find are dog ticks which are harmless
What a shame to move a nice home and not know how to do it. Post, wish you were on that job. It would have been perfect!
“Bare wires on insulators” - never have seen that, though I have seen knob and tube wiring. That is actually one of the safest types of wiring, if unapproved modifications have not been made, and the proper fuses are being used. But it is old enough that by this stage unapproved modifications usually have been made, and people love to cheat by installing 20 or worse 30 amp fuses in place of 15 amp ones. So even though it is theoretically very safe, in practice, yes, it does need replacing.
I worked on a guys house that got damaged by a fire and he had his house running 3-phase. of course he was a millionaire and the house was like 7,000 square feet. but i thought it was odd. just glad I don't do residential any more.
Hey mate! I just wanna say thanks for your videos, i have unclogged so many drains thanks to you! Great stuff, keep it up!
@post 10, always posting a video relevant to the world. Such a relaxing Sunday afternoon watch. Thank you for posting.
Love when you post
10
Get it
You said Post!
@@FahQ-fo3zc ???
My name is Anthony
christ i'm such a southerner, when you said "look at all that rot there" i thought you said 'right' instead of 'rot' for a second
Excited to watch. I love the abandoned series.
This house looks more like a "gonna be" drug lab/growing place to me, Post 10!
If this was here In nova scotia, someone would have burned it to the ground by now! Everything you said is true...the foundation problem kind of makes it hard to fix up at all!
Yeah they like getting drunk and burning everything back east
buying your shirt for my birthday ! cant wait!
looks like it might have become a grow op..based on the panel and those huge lights
Ah man you didn’t open up those tubes you found in the closet in the first video. I thought if you were going to go back you were going to open it. I bet it could be the blueprints of the house.
Farm board, learned something new.
Thanks for the video. Stay safe.
They may have planned on putting a brick facade around the frame of the house and that is why the foundation is so much bigger.
This was my thought too, same size ledge all the way around would be about right for cladding it with foam sheathing and then brick/stone. Can't say it's not a mistake though as this looks like a hackney DIY project by some wannabe "handyman"(jack of all trades, master of none).
Lots of good lumber and materials if the place was disassembled.
The wallboard is what is used in mobile homes, that's why it's so thin.
The conduit under the panel is for underground utilities, specifically, the electric service. Called a sweep. Another good video post10……
It would have been turned up and connected to the bottom of the panel by removing a “knock-out”.
I roof brand new houses and the roof decking is always osb (Oriented Strand Board). I actually don't like plywood roof decking because over time it tends to warp and push up on the edges of each sheet.
How sad, Its too bad no one bought it.... now, it had to be totally torn down....
Always nice to revisit classics.
23:22 when you said sorry buddy to the spider, you sounded like Beavis.
It’s mind-boggling you stood under that death trap. Please don’t do that.
Re the 3 phase, if it has hydro power the stator windings may be supplying 3 phase.
Decimal system for the win. 😉 100cm is 1m.
Bees don't use chewed wood that they turn into paper for their nests. These are wasps. 😉 20:20 At least the European ones do not... I am not an expert on bees in the U.S. but I guess they bee(!)have the same... *Badum tsssss* 😁
OMG!! I have that same color fractured block around my house!! too cool
The barn boards in this place are worth thousands as reclaimed wood. It's a pity the place hasn't been sold as salvage.
Nice to go through this place again. Very interesting.
Nice that the inflation shock on construction material (lumber) seems to be over. Or the inflation is present on stock market at the moment.
My thoughts on the choice of materials is I think they used surplus or left over stuff, which isn't a bad thing, but like you said, mistakes were made, so regardless of what they spent, it apparently wasn't enough.
Oh my God....please be careful. The place makes me nervous.
Great Video Post 10,
Shame the cabin never got renovated,
It would have been a nice place to live...🙂👍
Do up the house but leave everything crooked 😉
You should make more videos about abandon places
Ticks are going to be checking for post 10 after this.
Crazy to even walk around that place. Almost any loading could bring it down.
like I said I'm not worried about myself taking it down it held tens of thousands of pounds of snow last winter
I don’t know how you can even go into this place. Creepy.
Whenever you find cool stuff left as "trash" in these abandon buildings I think it would be moraly ok to take it and restore it! Anyway it is left there to rot and the intention behind it is good! It would make nice videos and give those objects a second life! 😁 what do you think of that?
that's how becoming a criminal starts taking things you think nobody will miss but it is still theft
@@post.10 I would consider it more as recycling... I do respect your opinion though! 🙂 I think that if it has been abandonned for a long timd it means that the owner doesn't want it anymore (like trash they would put on the side of the road) and it could be nice to give it a new life and have people enjoying it again instead of it just rotting in the forest... for sure the best thing to do would be to find who it belongs to and ask that person first. Plus it is good for our planet
This is that one minecraft project that never got completed
Cool video man!