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The Insides of these Abandoned Cooling Towers Look Straight Out of a Sci-Fi Film

abandoned cooling towers by reginald van de velde 1 The Insides of these Abandoned Cooling Towers Look Straight Out of a Sci Fi Film

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
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In an ongoing series, Belgian photographer Reginald Van de Velde explores the inner workings and mechanisms of cooling towers across Europe. Capturing abandoned ones, active ones, decommissioned ones, towers on maintenance and ones slated for demolition.

For Reginald, the interiors of cooling towers yield astonishing vistas, so grand and impressive. Reginald approaches these objects as landscapes. Searching for patterns, sense of scale, repetition, and disruption, rendering landscapes within. Van de Velde adds:

 

“One thing that fascinates me extremely is the fact that not a single cooling tower is the same”, Reginald says. “Each and every one of them has a unique interior design and build! They all look the same from the exterior, but with each visit to a new cooling tower I’m always surprised by a different interior, time and time again.”

 

To see more amazing work from Reginald, check him out at the links below!

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

The impressive interior view of a giant cooling tower scheduled for maintenance, France.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Unreal scenery resembling the set of a sci-fi movie. This is the view inside a defunct cooling tower in Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
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Slated for demolition, this cooling tower in Luxemburg features a clockwork-like design & layout.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
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At a height of 15 meters these 4 catwalks connect a centered water and steam outlet that looks like a shrine. Germany.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
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It could have been a set from the latest Star Wars movie, but this is as real as it can get: looking up inside the belly of a cooling tower. Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
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A booth sits otherworldly still amidst fern in this decommissioned cooling tower in Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

A water and steam outlet is positioned in the center of a vast array of thousands and thousands of cooling lamella, a technique used to cool down water particles. Italy.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
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Vegetation is slowly taking over the bottom area of this cooling tower slated for demolition, Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Covered in moss and algae these beams support the inner structure of a defunct cooling tower, UK.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Winter Wonderland: snow particles piling up inside a defunct cooling tower in Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

A decommissioned tower featuring a circular cooling system is seen in Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Another type of circular cooling system is seen in this abandoned cooling tower in Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Passage to nowhere: a catwalk disappears into the warm moist air that rises from this active cooling tower, Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Inside the belly of an active cooling tower: billions of water drops fall down while releasing heat to the environment. Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

A structure that resembles the look & feel of a cooling tower: this is the view inside a gasometer, an industrial recipient used for the storage of natural gas. Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

The spectacular view inside a decommissioned gasometer in Germany, looking upwards. The air vents at the top dome create natural ambient light. Gasometers can reach heights of 150 meters.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Workers left behind a ladder in this cooling tower scheduled for maintenance, France.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Matrix-like patterns are seen inside this dysfunctional cooling tower in Germany.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Snow particles cover the interior mechanism of an abandoned cooling tower in Belgium.

 

REGINALD VAN DE VELDE
Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Warm moist air rises from a central outlet inside an active cooling tower, Belgium.

 

 

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