Abandoned Medusa Cement Company


Medusa Cement Company was the oldest and was the biggest cement company in the USA. America does not need as much cement due to population decrease from boomers dying, people not having babies, females being sterilized, and Planned Parenthood abortions that kill 350,000 fetus per year. USA has had 50,000 million abortions since 1970. These dead babies do not need driveways.

Music by DR

Abandoned Power Plant


Abandoned Power Plant located in downtown Dayton Ohio was visited by Urban explores Marko Vovk and Johnno Bashian. This power plant was outdated and was a coal faculty. The power plant and building became obsolete and was vacated.
Abandoned Hotel

Abandoned Train

The Abandoned Pennsylvania YMCA Railroad Hotel Canton Ohio

Abandoned Amusement Park Chippewa Lake

Abandoned Grain Silo

MUSIC and composition
M. R. (Music written for Cleveland Marko)
All music interest contact Marko Vovk

Abandoned Bridge


Abandoned Bridge in Cleveland Ohio explored by Urban Explorers. The Jefferson Avenue Bridge was built in 1905. The steel truss bridge once spanned and crossed the Cuyahoga River which had a lift bridge with a Cowing Roller Bascule Bridge design. The Jefferson St. Bridge was Temporary Closed in 1957 after it was hit by a freighter. In 1958 bids were taken to make repairs. The repair cost of $3,000,000 was too high and the bridge was abandoned. Today, the bridge is severely overgrown with bushes and trees, and the railings are falling off the few spans that are still left.
Abandoned East Cleveland

Urban Exploration Abandoned Trailer Park

Abandoned Warner & Swasey complex

Abandoned Observatory

Abandoned Amusement Park Chippewa Lake

Cleveland Aquarium

Festivus Urban Explorers Version

Music provided by Ryan Manthey a Lakewood Ohio resident and Musician.
Ryan Manthey https://soundcloud.com/ryan-manthey-1

Cleveland’s abandoned Warner & Swasey complex


Cleveland’s abandoned Warner & Swasey complex
The WARNER & SWASEY CO. was a leading manufacturer of machine tools, telescopes, and precision instruments. New England machinists WORCESTER P. WARNER† and AMBROSE SWASEY† formed a partnership in Chicago in 1880. They moved to Cleveland. They opened a machine tool shop on Carnegie Ave. near E. 55th St. in Aug. 1881. The firm produced turret lathes for tanks and planes used in several wars. Utilizing the same techniques and machinery used to produce machine tools, they also produced telescopes. In 1886 the firm built the largest telescope at the time for the Lick Observatory in California, and later completed large telescopes for the U.S. Naval Observatory and the Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin. During World War II, the company employed 7,000 people. Warner & Swasey’s closed it last remaining plant in Solon in Jan. 1992 ending the century old company.
Abandoned Observatory

Urban Exploration Abandoned Trailer Park

Abandoned Amusement Park Chippewa Lake

Bigfoot Sasquatch Being Secretly Killed by Government

Cleveland’s abandoned Warner & Swasey complex