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Explored Locations

LIRR Drawbridges in L.I.C.

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on May 21, 2006

DR-1030
Sometimes people are surprised to learn that there are two railroad drawbridges in L.I.C. The LIRR Drawbridges are hidden in plain sight. DB and M drawbridges are located right next to each other just off Newtown Creek in LIC. Both were built for 2 track operations, and both only have a single stretch of track in use today. The similarities end there.
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Greenpoint Terminal Warehouses – Post-fire sunset.

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on

2 weeks later I got down to the hood again to get some nice shots just as the sun set. The most remarkable thing I found was how the now entirely collapsed/destroyed buildings opened up a startlingly good view of the Empire State Building.

Greenpoint Terminal Warehouses: May 2 2006

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on May 18, 2006

On the night of May 2nd, close to 24 hours after the fire had started, the flames were still burning and the smoke was still thick. The NYPD had the entire area still closed off, but that didn't stop The Man, aka Hogger, from getting very up close to the scene of the crime.

Greenpoint Terminal Warehouses: After the Fire

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on

These photos were taken late in the day on May 2nd 2006, the day that the heart and Soul of GTW burned.
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Greenpoint Terminal Warehouses: Ra’s Lair

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on May 17, 2006

Ra is the international man of mystery that made GTW his home. A large man with a tattooed face and well versed anarchists knowledge of survival, mere words will never be able to describe this man or myth.

This was his lair at the top of GTW Area 3.

Greenpoint Terminal Warehouses: Santa Attacks.

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on

The Sick Santa Explorathon (SSE) was a rather ridiculous Santacon-afterparty held in 2003. The grand excuse for this utterly stupid evening was simple: Santa is the ultimate trespasser. He breaks into billions of homes. Santa is significantly more bad-ass than anyone you know.

It also helps that no cop wants to be the one seen arresting Santa for you know, just doing his job...

Greenpoint Terminal Market: The Night Raid

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on May 15, 2006

The guard that was usually on duty had finally disappeared... so you know what happened next. I'll just let the photos say it all.

Greenpoint Terminal Warehouse Collapse Zone

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on May 13, 2006

I remember 2004. It was springtime, and A & P were in town once again. These guys are a little more on the daring side, and they hadn't seen the insanity that was the Greenpoint Terminal Warehouses just yet, so off we went.

We started on the south side of the facility and worked our way northward and upward, climbing the most deformed stairs, skywalks and rooftops we could find. Along the way we ran into Ra, the squatter who's turf these buildings was. We ended the night hanging out with him at the top of a building which had just about entirely collapsed. The only way to get to this spot was to go through a different building and come out on a rusted fire escape to walk into the next door where you could stand and stare down at oblivion itself.

Todd Shipyard, Red Hook, Brooklyn. NYC

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on April 4, 2006

DR-0347

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Abandoned Park Ave Trolley Station

By: Bad Guy Joe , Posted on March 18, 2006

Speed upon entering tunnel: 65mph
Duration: 5 minutes
Number of photos taken: 38
Video Footage: 42 seconds

This was quite frankly the coolest short duration exploration I've made in a long time. It was a surgical strike of urban guerrilla historianism pulled off with the lightening speed and energy that one would come to expect of any of NYC's more capable explorers.

The target of this operation was the abandoned 38th street trolley station located in the no name auto tunnel south of Grand Central Station under Park Avenue. Originally constructed as an extension of railroad service south of grand central in the 1850s, the tracks and tunnel eventually came to be used for trolley service which used the station between in 1870 and 1935. The original trolley cars were pulled by horses, with electrical trolleys later added at the turn of the century. In 1935, the tunnel was closed for two years and converted for automobile use. The station stairs to the surface were retained as an emergency exit for this auto tunnel.

Today, the station/stairs lays dormant and isolated. There is no pedestrian access to this location (except via the locked hatch on the street surface), thus making this mission mildly difficult to pull off. Just like sex with your mom though, timing really is everything, and dedication to the trade will always get the job done.

Ntwrkguy was behind the wheel (the brand new just off the showroom floor wheels, I should add) for this mission, playing the key role in it's success. Without wheels and a capable savvy driver, there is no way to pull off this mission. I suppose you could run into the tunnel on foot, but traffic moves very fast here, and there is little space to be out of harms way. As one of few stretches of road through midtown that is devoid of red lights and pedestrians, the tunnel and associated road viaduct that wraps around the Grand Central Terminal building are something of a speedway for motorists. Traffic here is a constant, even at the midnight hour. With good timing and maneuvering though we manage to enter the tunnel without any cars behind us. I hop out and he takes off, with the plan to be picked up in 5 minutes - just enough time to document the spot and to escape should there be any motion sensor or security system (none of which was found here).

I ran up the stairs to scope out the entire location. Unfortunately, the catwalk above the roadway is the only accessible 'hidden' section to this station. Directly in the middle of this catwalk is a short few steps leading to the hatch which opens into the median of park avenue. Appropriately, next to this exit is a small locked room labeled 'control room'.

The door was stainless steel, and the lighting around this area appeared modern and recently improved - however, the thick coating of dirt on the stairs told another story. Each step left a footprint in this half in thick soot, which also coated the walls. With no other footprints present, it was like walking on the moon for the first time. Clearly, the last time someone was at this spot on foot was quite some time ago.

To sum up this trip in one word, I would have to say 'exciting'. The constant rush of cars created an energized sensation, and the shortness in duration made little room for error. Just as I began to videotape I could hear the car horn echoing through the tunnel, signaling that it was time to leave, and with a cab coming up fast from behind, there was no time for long goodbyes, just the laughter of having pulled this off in such a constrained time frame under pressing conditions.

Locations

Here is a listing of all of our uploaded locations.

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    LTVSquad.com is the blog of NYC's most notorious team of explorers. We bring you a unique roasted blend of content culled from the fringes and dark underbelly of this fine city. Consider us an Autodidact's guide to urban exploration, adventure and fringe art. Mixed with 2 part photography and video, 1 parts social commentary and (ill)legal mentality.

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