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4 Awesome Unfinished or Abandoned Structures in Florida

To visit Florida on holiday and come back having only experienced Disney World is both a travesty and an occurrence far too common amongst modern tourists. Florida is absolutely full of fascinating architecture, quirky sights and beautiful structures that are more than worth the trip on their own.

Here are just 4 examples of local sights that have either been abandoned since completion or never finished and which serve as a perfect destination for tourists looking for unique photo opportunities or parts of Florida that contain more character and history than Mr Disney’s theme park. Make sure you include them in your plans when you next visit.

1. Stiltsville

Stiltsville

If you head down to Biscayne Bay and look out to sea you’ll spot 6 incredible buildings hovering above the shallow waters. At its peak this sea-dwelling community known as Stiltsville comprised of 36 properties resting on stilts, all located at least a mile from the shore. During the days of prohibition local fisherman Eddie Walker started Stiltsville by building a shack in the Bay - soon afterwards fellow locals did the same and the ‘village’ grew rapidly with the majority of the properties becoming gambling dens and clubs as they weren’t victim to laws which disallowed these types of establishment within a mile from shore. Over the years the houses-on-stilts have taken many a battering from hurricanes and other severe weather and these days only a few remain, empty and falling into disrepair.

2. Perky’s Bat Tower

Perky's Bat Tower

In 1929 frustrated local businessman Richter Clyde Perky decided the time had come to rid his holiday resort of mosquitoes and the threat of both malaria and commercial failure. His idea was to invest in a structure called a Bat Tower, the invention of a Texan ‘Bat Researcher’ by the name of Dr. Campbell who believed that the towers would provide an attractive home for bats, well-known gobblers of mosquitoes. The plans in place, Mr Perky installed the huge wooden Bat Tower at great cost, shipped in hundreds of bats from Texas and Cuba and put the Champagne on ice. As soon as the bats were released they flew away, never to return. The charming Bat Tower, minus the resort it was meant to save, can still be seen and photographed at mile marker 17 of Lower Sugarloaf Key. Watch out for the mosquitoes.

3. Fort Jefferson

Fort Jefferson

Work began on this fascinating, unfinished coastal fort in 1846 and the building is still the largest masonry structure in the Western Hemisphere, comprising of over 16 million bricks. Construction on the hexagonal fort continued for 30 years, the work-in-progress at its peak becoming home to 2′000 people, building work only stopped when advances in artillery development and armored ships rendered the fort’s defensive walls useless. These days this fantastic structure is part of Dry Tortugas National Park and can only be reached by seaplane or boat but the effort is definitely worth it.

4. Bahia Honda Rail Bridge

Bahia Honda Rail Bridge

If you ever visit the Florida Keys, make sure you head to Bahia Honda Key near the lower end of the islands. In the early 1900s it was connected to neighbouring island Spanish Harbor Key by the Bahia Honda Bridge, part of the engineering marvel known as the Overseas Railroad. These days, following both the devastating Labor Day Hurricane in 1935 and the creation of a newer bridge, the stunning abandoned bridge sits unused by traffic. What’s amazing is the bridge in its current form: 2 truss spans have been taken out leaving a huge gap for boat traffic to pass through and locals use the disconnected portion as an ideal fishing spot. Definitely a unique view to behold.

So there you have it: 4 beautifully unique locations in Florida without a single sighting of Mickey Mouse.

And that’s just for starters.

SOURCES

http://www.fortjefferson.com

http://goflorida.about.com/od/allaboutflorida/ss/7wonders.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugarloaf_Key_Bat_Tower

http://www.stiltsville.org

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23 Responses to “4 Awesome Unfinished or Abandoned Structures in Florida”

  1. Singh Says:

    Real Cool.

    Lovely Structures.

  2. Son Nguyen Says:

    Very cool and love the photos, I definitely would love to visit these places (esp. Fort Jefferson) some time in the future.

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  5. iGuzz Says:

    Fort Jefferson is so nice.

  6. FauxNixon Says:

    Impressive

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  10. pat Says:

    When my parents bought their house in Miami, the previous owners had left photos of 1960’s parties at a house in Stiltsville, complete with white sunglasses and flowered mini dresses. It’s still a great place to go by boat and the flats nearby are fun at low tide.

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  13. androo Says:

    wow nice post… i’ve grown up in florida and never realized theses places were around… makes me want to do a road trip!

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  15. Buck Weaver Says:

    I am not sure of the exact difference between a “building” and a “structure” but Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) City hall claims to be “Largest and tallest Masonry Building in the world” (http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/2115/Mainframeset.html) which also states 88,300,000 hand made hard bricks & 300,000 pressed & enameled bricks were used in construction compared to the mere 16 million used in Fort Jefferson.

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  17. Roger Glover Says:

    | # Buck Weaver Says:
    | April 3rd, 2008 at 10:48 pm
    |
    | I am not sure of the exact difference between a “building” and a “structure” but
    | Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) City hall claims to be “Largest and tallest Masonry
    | Building in the world”

    Phildelphians seem to make a lot of claims like that. I was on a tour in Philadelphia when the guide claimed that Philadelphia was the oldest continuous English-speaking settlement in the Americas, noting that St. Augustine, FL, while older, was originally Spanish, and that Plymouth Rock, MA, Jamestown, VA, and Roanoke, NC, while older, were abandoned.

    Of course, what the guide did not mention, or perhaps know, was that several satellite settlements of these other colonies were also founded, and some were never abandoned. The oldest of these was Phoebus, VA, now a section of Hampton, VA, which was settled almost two years before Philadelphia.

  18. RPO Says:

    It would be indeed I would love to finish the structures that were never finished

  19. Pokin Says:

    Ha that’s awesome! So many places I just don’t know about out there. I guess the residents of Stiltsville better not run out of milk or sugar. Even borrowing from the neigbhours would be quite the chore. :p

  20. Travel Guide Says:

    Those structures are really awesome. I like the fort very much. It will definitely be worth traveling to Fort Jefferson. Other structures are equally beautiful.

  21. Eric Says:

    Wow - thanks for putting this together - other than Fort Jefferson, I’d never heard of these places before - Stiltsfille seems especially cool (I love monkeying around half-built houses and ruins :))

  22. Matt Says:

    absolutely amazing!

  23. House Signs Says:

    WOW. How wonderfull.

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