Deep in the Transylvanian countryside lies an ancient salt mine dating back over two millennia.
Today Salina Turda has become an unlikely tourist attraction, with thousands of visitors descending its vertical shafts each year to play mini-golf, go bowling and row around its underground lake. [...]
British photographer Richard John Seymour recently travelled to Salina Turda in his quest to document human-altered landscapes.
— thespaces.com
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8 Comments
That's fantastic.
Let's see... ancient labyrinthine compound... deep underground... in Transylvania... sounds great! What could go wrong?
An attitude like that is why we can't have nice things, citizen. ;)
I must go there.
I'm just sayin' make sure to wear a turtleneck and a garlic crucifix. You'll be fine ;o)
They say architecture is an old person's game. Immortality could be seen as a brilliant career strategy.
I completely agree, Pete.
....Oh, I thought you wrote immorality.
Pete that may work. I could win the Prizker in a few hundred years.
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