This house was on land which was taken over for the road changes in Alliston, for the Honda plant.

Urban Exploration
There is more to urban exploration than taking a walk in the city.
There are 339 posts filed in Urban Exploration (this is page 15 of 57).
Creative Rural Photography

Source: Thomas Muther, Jr. | Antique Truck and Me
This photograph would not be the same with clothing. I especially like the feeling of “one antique to another”. Thomas isn’t an antique, but the feeling is there. Weathered, but still standing.
House Along the Highway (2006)
These photos are from two different trips to see this house. The first time I could not cross the field, past the barn. So my photos were taken from far back. But I did get a few photos of the crumbled shed and the actual house peeking around the barn.
Later I went back and walked to the house. It had a wonderful front door. Odd, but there were doors on three sides of the house. Inside was a lot of storage, turned to junk from animals, weather, etc.
This house went down sometime early this year, 2015, or possibly late in 2014.

The House with a Face (2006)
I still think of this house as the one with the best face (it looked like a face to me).
I think this is the second house I explored, but not on my own. I’ve taken three different people/ groups to visit here. The last time (with the group) the house was demolished. That was sad.
This was also from 2006. I will add more photos from the other visits I made over the years while the house stood.










This House is Long Gone Now (2006)
I’m beginning to upload my photos from Flickr. Trying to sort them by location. This is the first abandoned house I visited on my own. These are from 2006. At some point I lost track of my original full sized photos for the first three of these. I will have them burned to a disk if I find it.
The house is long ago demolished. I didn’t get back for more photos in time. But, that was early on, when I thought it would be around a long time.
I had to crawl under the gate to get up to the house. There was a big space underneath so it wasn’t hard. I still don’t go to places past the point I can easily get in. But, it is sometimes hard to resist a closer look. I love the old buildings themselves. Going inside is less interesting than seeing the outside details. Too often the inside doesn’t have much left to see, except a lot of trash (or trashed by vandals).
When I explored here I was using my first digital camera. I didn’t know about memory – how much I would need. I didn’t have a memory card because I assumed the memory in the camera would be plenty. It was pretty close… I ran out of memory just at the point I would have taken a look at the back of the house. I still walked around, just didn’t get photos.
After my adventure I was feeling pretty happy and thought I’d come back again to finish getting photos. I crawled back under the gate, got to my car… no keys. I had put them in my pocket but they fell out somewhere along the way. Luckily for me they were just at the gate. Likely fell out when I was leaving.
I learned quite a lot about urban exploring from my first time. Most of all, I learned not to count on any place still being there the next time around. 


Millions Of Houses Left Abandoned This Morning
The Onion (see link below) is satire. You have to look to find the actual note saying so. Many of their posts make you wonder… but you aren’t quite sure. Satire is just a twist on reality.
In this case, I just loved the headline. So true and yet so obvious if you think about it. Most houses are left, locked up and empty, while people go on to start their work day, run errands, take trips and so on. There are easily millions of houses left abandoned every morning. For obvious reasons.
Source: Millions Of Houses Left Abandoned This Morning – The Onion – America’s Finest News Source











