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Construction sites as one normally thinks of them are a strange breed of
infiltration target: not a
completed building, by no means abandoned, and with a distinct tendency
towards being extremely boring. However, there is a phase in the life of
any given construction site, long after it first appears as a set of metal
pillars and support beams with a concrete foundation, and before the lights
and security systems go in, that it is not only as interesting as any
functional building but fascinating for unique features all its own.
A mature construction site, one worth exploring, will have at least one
floor put in, with walls, a floor and a ceiling. The rooms will be cut out
and well-defined and drywall may be going up. Brackets and cavities will be
in for ethernet and phone cables, and the machine rooms will be stocked and
ready for the power to be flipped on.
However, included amongst all the guts of the growing building are the signs
and tools of the work itself: saws, lathes, concrete-flattening-thingies and
other types of vague and nifty machines. Drywall dryers may be set up, fed
by huge propane tanks and spewing a foot-long gout of flame into a main
hallway in an intimidating fashion. Ladders and scaffolding are scattered
throughout the place, providing access from one level to the next.
Blueprints, maps, and various plans can be found lying around, and
construction supplies of various fashions are everywhere, in huge
stockpiles.
Making your way around the less-developed areas of a construction site is an
art in and of itself. We've walked across a single I-beam three
stories over the ground just to reach another part of a floor, and climbed
the outside of a building via the brackets set into it for bricklaying.
One of the most interesting features of construction site exploration is the
way the site grows and develops as time goes by. You can make several
visits, a
few days apart, and find new things each time. We've repeatedly visited
sites in the past just out of curiousity of what they were planned to be,
looking for new clues with each exploration.
Infiltration of construction sites, for all it offers, can be legally quite
dodgy. You're trespassing right off the bat, but depending on certain
factors, like the importance of the building going up, or the amount of
expensive equipment and proximity of construction vehicles, police may react
extremely negatively to anyone caught within a construction site. Be
stealthy, keep quiet, use common sense and don't do anything exceptionally
stupid.
Contact:
[email protected]
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