| 1. The Dining Room,The Basement and The First Floor |
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The dining room was easy to enter because someone had ripped off the plywood and broken all glasses of one window. All you had to do was lift the almost loose plywood and climb inside. Inside we faced a roof which was peeling big time, only ten years after last lunch hours.
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We thought this would be a way into the whole factory, but as it soon turned out the dining room is totally isolated from the other sections. Whoever came here to eat had to take a few steps outside when coming from the factory and use the double doors to enter.
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This dining room has had a fine wooden interior to represent the mechanical forest industry.
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The Shining door.
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And they say abandoned buildings are bad for citizens' security! Whoever's taken out his frustration and anger by smashing the lavatories (like the one in this picture) would've probably caused more havoc in somewhere less abandoned place.
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Definitely dead flowers, not very decorative anymore.
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After the disappointment of not getting inside the major part of the building from the dining section, we didn't give up. Since the place is probably going down soon anyway it's probably okay to say that we ripped plywood off another window and smashed some glasses to open the window frames. Climbing through the messed hole lead us here, the changing rooms.
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Cool sink and many good ol' style worker wardrobes.
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Adjacent to the dressing rooms were some narrow storage rooms and rooms whiches original function could not be figured out. This room with spare parts for trucks had among other junk a barrel coming all the way from Brazil.
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Steam room. The massive veneer drying kilns got their steam from here, if not mistaking badly, and possibly also the outdoor log pond got it's warm water from here. The tanks are missing anyway, and pipes have been ripped. Many ducts had asbestos danger signs, placed by inspectors for the demolition. Luckily, none of those pipes seemed touched yet.
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Pitch black with all windows boarded, reeking of oil, fungi and rot and everything being messed, decaying and dirty the basement was a rather depressing place. However, the least discovered floors of the factory were the two dark basement floors, probably for the same reason. There were almost no tags, and there was plenty of stuff left from the factory suitable for souveniring, like stacks of old productivity logger papers.
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The factory was remarkable in size, for example they had an own medical department. Should someone had swallowed glue needed for the plywood, here would've been the cure.
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There were two service elevators between the floors.
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Llight cannon tries to enlight the elevator from inside.
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This has been a foundation for some very mig machine, which has been deconstructed and carried away. Only a huge hole open all the way to the third floor was left.
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There were also many other sections in the basement, according to the sign the tanks behind this blast door may have held phenolic resin and other flammable liquids.
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Fire department somewhere in the basements. There were also other interesting quarters, like a small chemistry lab.
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A strange message from the flower girls loaded with aggression invites people from the upper basement floor to the stairwell, where you can walk up to the production floors.
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