Abandoned Places Photography Guides: 50 Locations With GPS, Gear & Legal Access
~12 min read
Abandoned places carry a particular weight in the camera. Light cuts across peeling paint, dust hangs in the air like a held breath, and every frame asks the same question: who was here, and why did they leave? This hub is the photographer’s atlas to 50 of the world’s most photogenic abandoned locations — ghost towns, decommissioned military installations, post-industrial ruins, and entire cities frozen mid-sentence.
Every guide includes GPS coordinates, legal access status, gear recommendations, and the ethical and safety considerations that separate respectful documentation from trespassing. We do not glamorize illegal entry. We do show you how to photograph what is reachable, with permission, with care.
How this hub is organized
Abandoned-place photography splits into three honest categories, and we organize the guides accordingly:
- Public and legally accessible — state parks, ghost towns on public land, drive-up access. These are the workhorses of urbex photography. 24 locations.
- Permit or guided tour required — the photograph exists, but you cannot just walk in. Tours, photography workshops, and special permits are how you get the shot legally. 17 locations.
- Memorial, restricted, or demolished — locations that should be photographed only with deep respect, or that no longer exist in a way the public can visit. We document them for context. 9 locations.
Public access — drive up and shoot
These locations are on public land or have legal pedestrian access during posted hours. Bring water, watch your footing, and respect any “no entry” signage on individual structures. Each guide below includes a full {$47 PDF field guide} and {$19 mood-matched Lightroom preset pack}.
- Bodie State Historic Park — USA
- Centralia Ghost Town — USA
- Salton Sea and Bombay Beach — USA
- Calico Ghost Town — USA
- Rhyolite Ghost Town — USA
- Terlingua Ghost Town — USA
- Jerome Arizona — USA
- Virginia City Montana — USA
- St Elmo Colorado — USA
- Goldfield Nevada — USA
- Thurmond Ghost Town — USA
- Houtouwan Fishing Village — China
- Kayakoy Ghost Village — Turkey
- Gulangyu Abandoned Mansions — China
- Bodie Island Shipwrecks Outer Banks — USA
- Michigan Central Station — USA
- Coney Island Abandoned Rides — USA
- Seongmodo Abandoned School — South Korea
- Doel Abandoned Village — Belgium
- Highland Cleared Villages — Scotland
- Best Gear for Abandoned Places Photography — USA
- Camera Settings for Abandoned Buildings — USA
- Legal and Safety Guide for Abandoned Photography — USA
- Moody Editing for Urbex and Abandoned Places — USA
Permit or tour required — the legal way in
The Soviet-era exclusion zones, the diamond-mining ghost towns of Namibia, the abandoned island prisons — these need a guide, a permit, or both. Each location guide below pairs the photography brief with the verified tour or permit pathway, so you can plan a real trip and not waste flights on a closed gate.
- Bannerman Castle — USA
- Kolmanskop Ghost Town — Namibia
- Pripyat and Chernobyl Exclusion Zone — Ukraine
- Hashima Battleship Island — Japan
- Beelitz-Heilstaetten Sanatorium — Germany
- Kennecott Mines — USA
- Craco Abandoned Village — Italy
- Ross Island Andaman — India
- Namie Town Fukushima — Japan
- Pyramiden Soviet Settlement — Norway
- Kalaupapa National Historical Park — USA
- Fort Jefferson Dry Tortugas — USA
- Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum — USA
- Eastern State Penitentiary — USA
- Alcatraz Island — USA
- Canfranc International Railway Station — Spain
- Maunsell Sea Forts — UK
Memorial and restricted — photographed with respect
Some places are not photographable in any conventional sense. Oradour-sur-Glane is a war memorial, not a location. Buzludzha’s interior is closed. Nara Dreamland was demolished in 2017. We include these because photographers asking the question deserve an honest answer about what is and is not possible — and because the historical context informs how we approach the locations that are reachable.
- Oradour-sur-Glane Memorial Village — France
- Six Flags New Orleans — USA
- Packard Automotive Plant — USA
- Balestrino Abandoned Village — Italy
- Varosha Ghost Resort — Cyprus
- Buzludzha Monument — Bulgaria
- Grytviken Whaling Station — South Georgia
- Nara Dreamland Site — Japan
- San Zhi Pod Village History — Taiwan
Gear for abandoned-place photography
Three priorities shape urbex gear: low light, wide angles, and weight. Interiors are rarely sunny. Hallways and warehouse floors demand wider focal lengths than your average travel kit. And you are usually walking, climbing, and crouching for hours — every gram counts.
- Body: a full-frame mirrorless with strong high-ISO performance and good IBIS. Sony A7 IV, Nikon Z6 III, Canon R6 II.
- Wide zoom: 16-35mm f/2.8 or 14-24mm — interiors and tight stairwells need it.
- Standard prime: a 35mm f/1.4 or 50mm f/1.8 for environmental portraits and detail shots.
- Tripod: a travel tripod with a low-angle column. Long exposures inside dim structures are routine.
- Headlamp: red filter mode preserves your night vision and your camera’s ability to meter ambient light.
- Respirator: N95 minimum. Lead paint, asbestos, mold, and rodent droppings are real hazards in pre-1980 structures.
The photographer’s ethical code for abandoned places
- Take nothing, leave nothing. Not a souvenir, not a footprint where there was none.
- Photograph the place, not the perpetrator. If recent vandalism is in your frame, ask yourself whether including it normalizes it.
- Do not geotag actively endangered sites. If a location is being looted or burned, your post is the next looter’s GPS. Use general regional tags.
- Memorials are not photo opportunities. Oradour, Chernobyl’s hospital basement, the firefighters’ uniforms — read the room.
- If you would not photograph it with the original owner watching, reconsider.
Want the field guides?
Each location-specific guide on this hub includes full GPS coordinates, golden hour timing, vantage points, gear-by-location notes, and legal access detail. The premium PDF field guides ($47) and matching Lightroom preset packs ($19) are available on the individual location pages.
For a single multi-location reference, the Photo Atlas PDF ($97) collects every published guide on ShutYourAperture into one downloadable atlas, with lifetime updates as new locations ship.