- Joined
- Jan 20, 2014
- Messages
- 394
- Reaction score
- 886
- Points
- 93
- Location
- Kamp-Lintfort/Germany
- Website
- www.tomvandutch.de
The Chateau Verdure lies behind overgrown trees and is owned by a high wall. Chateau Verdure was built in the 1930s. It is now forgotten in a possible suburb. The building has been abandoned since the 1990s. There are several other pseudonyms for this place (Château de l'écolière, Manoir Pavlovich and Château Fientes).
The entrance area of the Chateau Verdure is the main attraction at this location. In a niche under a curved stone staircase there is an old dusty grand piano. The piano luster has faded and the color has traditionally been seen. The sun shows up through the window panes of the double doors and shows a beautiful, subtle light over the piano keys. The piano stands on a black and white checkered floor, which looks wonderful from the landing on the first floor. From this particular point, the wrought-iron banister curves around the piano. It is probably the curved shape of the strong stone staircase that is responsible for the structural contacts of this spatial.
Two chairs stand alone in the middle of a bare living room at Chateau Verdure. The floor looks here has collapsed. The one of these chairs and the tattered provisional ones is no longer heard here. A cave of the room can be seen remnants of settings painted in blue.
The house is in a tragic state of disrepair. The modern homes it is called have no other charm. The upper floors can be heard quickly. Metal struts and wooden struts remove the right of the upper floor.
There have been attempts to save this house, but these should long since be lost.
The entrance area of the Chateau Verdure is the main attraction at this location. In a niche under a curved stone staircase there is an old dusty grand piano. The piano luster has faded and the color has traditionally been seen. The sun shows up through the window panes of the double doors and shows a beautiful, subtle light over the piano keys. The piano stands on a black and white checkered floor, which looks wonderful from the landing on the first floor. From this particular point, the wrought-iron banister curves around the piano. It is probably the curved shape of the strong stone staircase that is responsible for the structural contacts of this spatial.
Two chairs stand alone in the middle of a bare living room at Chateau Verdure. The floor looks here has collapsed. The one of these chairs and the tattered provisional ones is no longer heard here. A cave of the room can be seen remnants of settings painted in blue.
The house is in a tragic state of disrepair. The modern homes it is called have no other charm. The upper floors can be heard quickly. Metal struts and wooden struts remove the right of the upper floor.
There have been attempts to save this house, but these should long since be lost.