Anonymous wrote:toledo, ohio
Anonymous wrote:Reviewing these choices, many of the locations listed are flat. Is there something creepier about a flat landscape? Maybe flatness accentuates vacant and abandoned buildings?
Anonymous wrote:Murphy Village, SC. Irish Travellers live there, and it's truly bizarre. Huge McMansions with covered windows that appear unlived in, with trailers behind the houses where people actually reside. You definitely get the sense of being watched, because you are--I think they contact each other whenever there's a stranger cruising the neighborhood. If you drive around too long or too slow, they will follow you in big pickup trucks to intimidate you into leaving.
Anonymous wrote:Beaver, PA. Creeptastic
Anonymous wrote:Youngstown, OH
Really depressing
Gary, IN is super scary too.
Anonymous wrote:The area around Notre Dame in Indiana. So flat. everything looks the same. Creepy as hell.
Anonymous wrote:Bleak and depressing: the Kenilworth area in DC right along 295. Every time I drive 295 I think how awful it must be to live there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a town in New England that had an abandoned mental institution in it. It was about the size of college campus, dozens of large brick abandoned buildings. Very creepy.
Norwich, CT?
NP. This is my hometown and I can’t believe there’s someone else who knows about that place!
Oh Honey. It's not a secret! https://opacity.us/site22_danvers_state_hospital.htm
This site will draw you in
You're right! I'm clicking through pictures and can't stop. Some of those places are mega-creepy!
Anonymous wrote:Downtown Johannesberg - whoa - tall skyscrapers with windows blown out/covered by sheets with squatters living many stories up . .. looked super post-apocolyptic.