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The abandoned places also include an underground medical centre, a 'wagon graveyard' and a cemetery
Ahead of Halloween, The Star asked him to name the 'creepiest' places he's discovered within the city.
His choices included a disused cemetery in Loxley where many of the cracked and leaning headstones are being subsumed by nature, a 'haunted' pub just outside the city centre where doors are said to open by themselves and an underground medical centre where injured steelworkers were once treated.
An old 'railway wagon graveyard' hidden within dense woodland on the outskirts of Sheffield is another of the most unsettling sites he's ever explored.
Below are some of the best and eeriest photos of these sites, where spiderwebs, ominous graffiti and discarded toys all add to the chilling atmosphere.
His choices included a disused cemetery in Loxley where many of the cracked and leaning headstones are being subsumed by nature, a 'haunted' pub just outside the city centre where doors are said to open by themselves and an underground medical centre where injured steelworkers were once treated.
13. Narrow entrance
Hidden beneath what is now a car park on Garter Street, Sheffield, lie the remains of an old hospital where injured workers from the old Firth Brown steelworks were once treated.
The urban explorer behind Lost Places & Forgotten Faces described it as a 'cold and claustrophobic' place that 'has experienced a lot of death and suffering'. This photo shows the hidden entrance to the abandoned building. Photo: Lost Places & Forgotten Faces
Hidden beneath what is now a car park on Garter Street, Sheffield, lie the remains of an old hospital where injured workers from the old Firth Brown steelworks were once treated.
The urban explorer behind Lost Places & Forgotten Faces described it as a 'cold and claustrophobic' place that 'has experienced a lot of death and suffering'. Today the abandoned building is being taken over by nature, as this picture of a spider web in the corner of a door frame shows. Photo: Lost Places & Forgotten Faces
Hidden beneath what is now a car park on Garter Street, Sheffield, lie the remains of an old hospital where injured workers from the old Firth Brown steelworks were once treated.
The urban explorer behind Lost Places & Forgotten Faces described it as a 'cold and claustrophobic' place that 'has experienced a lot of death and suffering'. Today the paint is peeling and the building is beset by damp and mould, as this photo shows. Photo: Lost Places & Forgotten Faces
Hidden beneath what is now a car park on Garter Street, Sheffield, lie the remains of an old hospital where injured workers from the old Firth Brown steelworks were once treated.
The urban explorer behind Lost Places & Forgotten Faces described it as a 'cold and claustrophobic' place that 'has experienced a lot of death and suffering'. This picture shows some eerie graffiti on the bare walls. Photo: Lost Places & Forgotten Faces
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