First Posted by The Daily Mail
A lone man takes pictures inside the crumbling
House of the Bulgarian Communist Party on Mount Buzludzha, no longer
needed after the party has lost its grip on the country
The House of the Bulgarian Communist Party was
left after the regime collapsed two decades ago but the Bulgarian
authorities have neither maintained nor dismantled them, leaving behind
an eerie shell of a building
Still looking imposing in the snow despite its decay, the House of the Bulgarian Communist Party is now rarely visited
In the Thames estuary the abandoned wartime Redsands forts are rusting away, with Kentish flats windfarm on the horizon
Seagulls are now the only inhabitants at the Army's old Anti-Aircraft towers at Redsands, Kent
It may look like a science fiction film set but
this is a Russian military rocket factory outside Moscow, which is now
left unguarded
The photos of the NPO Energomash factory, which
produced liquid-fuel rockets, were taken by a woman called Lana Sator,
who managed to sneak into the facility
Looking now more like a haunted house than a
hotel, the Hotel del Salto in Columbia has trees growing through its
once-grand rooms. It opened in 1928 to welcome wealthy travelers
visiting Tequendama Falls but it closed down in the early nineties
The medieval village of Craco Basilicata became a ghost town after a series of recurring earthquakes scared people away in 1963
The romantic medieval castle of Bodiam Castle
near Robertsbridge in East Sussex looks like a classic fairytale but the
interior is entirely ruined
A sorry-looking amusement park has been unused
for decades after the town of Pripyat, built for Chernobyl workers and
their families, was evacuated after the 1986 explosion
Broken dodgems lie rusting at the Pripyat Chernobyl Amusement Park
After the Chernobyl disaster in the 1980s, the town of Pripyat in the Ukraine has been uninhabited after contamination fears
Unlikely as it looks, this was one part of the
1984 Winter Olympics. The picture shows a destroyed bobsleigh track on
Trebevic mountain, which was damaged during the 1992-95 siege of
Sarajevo in Bosnia and Herzegovina
The temples of Angkor Wat in Cambodia have
become a major tourist destination thanks to the fascinating way ancient
trees growing among the ruins have so unusually distorted them
The tree roots have almost entirely smothered the ruins of Ta Phrom, the famous Khmer Temple at Angkor Wat
Angkor Wat is the largest religious monument in the world but it threatens to become almost overrun by the nature around it
A lone aircraft that crashed near an ice runway in Patriot Hills has yet to be recovered from its resting place in Antarctica
One of the swing rides at the Nara Dreamland theme park in Japan, which closed down in August 2006
Due to lack of visitors Nara Dreamland eventually closed down, but it had operated since 1961
Inspired by Disney, Nara Dreamland's fairytale castles and fairground rides now look sad and forlorn
The once jolly mock-up American town in Nara Dreamland now looks cold and uninviting
A similar scenario befell the Wonderland
amusement park on the outskirts of Beijing, though Wonderland never had
the chance to even open
The derelict attraction Wonderland in Beijing,
China has mold and mildew creeping in after only a few years of neglect
since 2008
Boarded entrance gates now guard Wonderland in
Beijing, which had once been promoted by developers as 'the largest
amusement park in Asia'
A grim-looking unfinished castle stands
uncompleted in a field after funds were withdrawn due to disagreements
with the local government and farmers
Farmers dig a water well in a field that should have been landscaped gardens for the enchanted castle
This statue of Christ now has only fish for company at San Fruttuoso, Italy near Portofino
Christ of the Abyss is now covered in barnacles
and coral but it was deliberately put there in 1954 as a tribute to a
pioneer of scuba diving who died
Desert sand covers the furniture now in the ghost town of Kolmanskop, Namibia
Becoming part of the landscape, the Kolmannskuppe ghost town now blends in closely with its desert surroundings
Once a small but very rich mining village, it has now been empty since 1954 when the nearby diamond supply was slowly exhausted
The Ik-Kil Cenote in Yucatan, Mexico is one of
several 'cenotes', which were sacred wells used by Mayans. Young men and
women were thrown and left to drown there as a sacrifice to the god of
rain, but now they are popular with tourists for swimming
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