Tales of the Urban Explorer: Gazeby Hall
I have not been doing many writings about Urban Exploration lately and I really should as there are still THREE left in the bag from my trip to the Bradford, West Yorkshire area well over a month ago.
Before we reached the city, I had planned a trip to St Pauls Church in Denholme and Gazeby Hall in Wilsdon. Both are on the western outskirts of the city limits and it's a case of making the most of your trip while in the area.
St Pauls had looked more like a devil worship sanctuary than a church from the reports I was reading, but on arrival, it was full of builders obviously doing some renovation. That was a failure, and so Gazeby Hall only 4 miles away was the next target.
We were in luck; it was in the middle of nowhere, the only life being a farm that seemed to be doubling as a dog kennels. Dogs bark all the time in these places regardless of intruders and so we parked reasonably close to the venue and entered safe that nobody had noticed our presence.
Access was laughably easy, and this is a great place for anyone wanting a go at Urbex. Besides the hall, there appeared to be a much more modern building in a terrible state of disrepair.
What struck me was the double glazing which looked relatively new and modern.
Even if the hall was ruined, why had someone left this relatively modern structure to be eaten away by the elements?
The grounds were in a quite normal state that is, filled with litter and miscellaneous junk of all kinds. It’s easy to just clamber over this stuff and ignore it, but if you look there are personal items such as DVD’s and CD’s scattered about.
We had a good look at the ‘house’ before moving on the main course ‘the hall’ and found the second floor had completely collapsed.
The front area you could walk into and there was something resembling a roof, but the back had completely caved in.
I was determined to get some better shots so climbed up this large mound of dirt effectively raising myself to the second floor.
@mender1 wasn’t having any of this climbing lark and stayed down in the safety of the ground area.
Look at those window sills just hanging there. The building has gone but they remain. You do see some sights at these places.
Next was the hall itself of which there is little left. The markings on the entrance say 1828, and then 1958. It seems that stone was placed on the later date making it not as old as it seems.
@mender1 was noting the steel girders and explaining to me that it couldn’t really be that old if these were in place. There could have been some renovation in later years perhaps?
The conservatory or greenhouse looked like it was used to grow vegetables once. It was quite hard to get close to due to the thick scrub around it.
Some of the windows had metal bars. Maybe this was an attempt to board the place up once.
The hall had been burned out and little was left. This place would take a serious amount of money to resurrect to what was its former glory.
The windows were completely gone, and you could easily jump through the holes without fear of glass cuts. Not that you needed too, as the front door was just a huge gaping gap.
A rope was hanging down precariously. It made me think that someone had killed themselves here once. What other reason would it be there, yet I can find no evidence of any suicides within the grounds.
Gazeby Hall wasn’t the most exciting of explores but does contain some history. It was subject to an arson attack in 2017 and has an estimated value of £400,000 according to Zoopla.
A little digging reveals the hall does in fact date from 1828 and was restored in 1958. It must have been grand once. It is a listed building and that’s likely the only reason it still stands today.
All photographs were taken by myself.
Other articles in the ‘Urban Exploration’ series:
British Mohair Holdings Ltd
// Holdings Country Pottery (Revisited)
The Ones that Got Away // The Doll's House
Camelot Theme Park // Albion Street Day Nursery
Allsprings House // The Latvian Consolute
Rose Bank Mill // Horncliffe Mansion Part One: The Car Graveyard
Horncliffe Mansion Part Two: The Mansion // Stand Athletic Football Club
A Trilogy of Failures II // Brodock Ltd, The Old Paper Mill (Failed)
Workhouse Farm // Hellifield Abandoned Train
Extwistle Hall // Huncoat Power Station (Demolished)
A Trilogy of Failures // Holdings Country Pottery
References:
https://www.theurbanexplorer.co.uk/
https://www.28dayslater.co.uk/
https://www.whateversleft.co.uk/
https://www.britainsdecays.com/
http://www.urbanxphotography.co.uk/urbex-faqs
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Wow, what a mess! You probably have to be really careful around these buildings, not to mention the trash and personal items. Noted the 2nd floor fireplace still intact, as for the rope....hmmm Hopefully not used for a suicide. Really needs to be torn down, past the renovation stage
I once went to one of these abandoned houses and found children shoes, videotapes and shotgun shells, I don't even want to imagine what the hell happened in that farm... the worse part is that the farm was gorgeous, really, it was next to a lake! An amazing place to live in.
Wow nature has about taken that one back. Such a shame coz I liked the brick on the top shots. That rope is fairly newish looking. I have to think someone was thinking about it, and hopefully thought better of it and left!
Wow, that is pretty cool. It would have been neat to see a picture of the first place you tried even if you couldn't get in. There was an old dead end road near my house that people used to say crazy stuff happened at. That is what I thought of when you first described the other place. Nice pictures!
The church? A van was parked in the grounds and the builders were living in it it seems until the job was done. The outside was fixed up and boards had been placed. There wasn't much to see.
Hardly seems enough to be worth renovating. Sometimes you need to give up on old buildings. We cannot keep them all going forever.
With it being listed it cant be demolished. The newer house should not be in such a state, it cant be older that 30-40 years max.
The hall has been ravished by fire and is just a shell now. It seems most of these I look at have had idiots who like to torch them visit at some point.
That rope eh, quite macabre!
The rope was a little strange, who had put it there any why? It was attached to a burnt beam so the prospective suicide target may not get the desired result.
They might just get a sore arse. Maybe that will set them on the right path
Maybe the guy was just trying to have some autoerotic asphyxiation xD
Ha, yeah. That sounds like lots of fun eh!
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Ahh, too bad that there was so much trash outside. The building itself looks pretty cool though, at least in the photo's you've taken.
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