Ridiculously Photogenic Dairy Plant Part IV

Welcome further. As you can see, this room has been green.

I just love these window shots, and this place was a perfect one to take them. That’s why I call this the ridiculously photogenic dairy plant.

And here’s another room. Now we’re getting to the best shots.

Another room.

And another one. See already, what I mean?

Yet another room. The decay here is just plain beautiful.

The grey, moldy walls and the greenness outside just provide a perfect contrast.

An aspiring flower artist has been here.

Another look at the upstairs corridor.

The walls have originally been covered with old newspapers.

Let’s have a closer look. The article with the old man is remembering a veteran from the Finnish civil war in 1918. The other one with the house tells about the early 1940’s, so the paper is from the inter-war or the post-war era.

This room featured a large closet with wallpaper rolls.

Doors, doors and doors.

Another window and an old fridge.

And another room with beautiful light and beautiful decay.

This apartment was larger. The turquoise wall is also a surprise.

But more likely than an apartment, this was a common room, as it included a kitchen.

The room also included some cupboards.

A bat and a hedgehog, both bleeding.

This was indeed interesting. It looks more like blood than paint.

Another one of my beloved wooden TV:s.

And the top of the stairway. This is the end of photos from this location.

The municipality is planning a new school in the region, and one of the alternatives was to build it next to or even on the site. The ownership of the building is unclear and so is the future.The decision process actually includes an order to find out the ownership of this building.

Eventually they decided to build the school elsewhere. The dairy plant is protected and can’t be demolished.

Published by desertedfinland

A Finnish Urban explorer & Photographer

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