
A small room with a double entrance. Not much of it is left.

What followed was a small room, which resembled a lobby.

In addition to the walls, the pupils have also decorated paper bags. Save nature, buy a new car, this one says. I don’t think that’s a universally accepted way of saving nature nowadays.

The door seen in the lobby picture led to this room, which was either the school’s kitchen or a home economics classroom.

Or both. The large ventilation thing makes me guess that it was the kitchen.

Window cleaning detergent and an umberella. What a classic combo.

The lobby continued next to the kitchen. The original main entrance of the wooden part of the school has been close to the double doors up front. The annex to the late 1930’s part has been built in the 1950’s.
Also the size and shape of the lobby suggest that perhaps it has served as the canteen and lobby at the same time. This is just a guess, though.

The newer main entrance built in the 1950’s. The plastic floor tiles have come off pretty efficiently.

The other end of the lobby was one step higher than the one behind me. It led straight to the gym.

The gym was in an awful shape. Parts from the roof had fallen in and the parquette was completely destroyed.

I have probably never seen a school in such a bad condition. The contrast to the wooden part is huge, although of course I don’t know what would await upstairs there.

Another look at the roof. While it is concrete, it has leaked for several years. The lamps are rusty, the girders are growing something. Even the radiators are rusty.

The same theme continues here. It is evident, that the school has stood abandoned for a very long time.

Another look at the gym, as I couldn’t help but to admire the beauty of what it had previously been.

And another closer look at the roof. More things are sure to fall down soon.