The Holiday Shack

Derelict Places

Help Support Derelict Places:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

sureshank

Veteran Member
Veteran Member
Joined
Oct 6, 2014
Messages
208
Reaction score
999
Location
south wales
So at the begaining of march me and my pal jordan did a weekend trip to norfolk to explore and meet up with our good pal mikeymutt im only just getting around to writing the report for this one it was one of my favourite explores of the our trip and we did about 22 in total that weekend the shack was very small but at the time was probly only somewhere to eat breakfast and rest your head at night but the shack did have a train carriage extension nice to see a place like this as it was a very different explore lol

31189239191_10d8770077_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30935891760_912410d15e_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr



30482048094_3787a2eb55_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482044194_3496907174_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482042484_41e7191c95_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30496330973_823fb69328_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482038454_602cc015c3_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482036554_f1d4158686_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482034404_1856a0eb5b_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482031734_91f4555b87_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482029144_2159f23532_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482026494_1bbb0474d3_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr


30482023564_f06689c197_c.jpgThe Holiday stack by kurt roberts, on Flickr
 
Nice one, wish you had done an exterior of the carriage bit. A very common sight during my childhood days up and down the whole length of the East Coast. Most at that time were the old wooden construction, three axle stock that had been rapidly withdrawn for safety reasons - fire and collision risks. Over the years one saw an increasing number of bogie (both wooden and metal) stock appearing on the headland sites, then in the great coastal clean-up of the headlands they all vanished. They disappeared because they were in such poor condition and very difficult and expensive to move to the new inland locations allocated, so scrapping in situ was the only option. Over the years it became apparent that some of the more inland ones were being used for more permanent living accommodation, than just holiday lets (at that time, just like today, housing was a tremendous problem). Thanks for the trip down memory lane!
 
I've heard of camping coaches, where old railway carriages had been converted to holiday accommodation.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top