abandoned buildings berlin
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This Meat Has Expired

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abandoned buildings
Expired products still sit in the cafeteria at the abandoned Meat Factory.

The glass crunches underneath my shoes with every step I take, the stairway is dimly lit by diffused daylight on this wintery day. A cold blast of air blows through the broken window sending a thin layer of snow swirling on the stairs as I continue to walk to the top level.  The paint on the walls and ceiling is peeled and cracking. There is a faint smell of smoked meat that still oozes out of the building and I’m nervously aware that I’m the only one here. I cautiously enter the doorway to the top floor and round the corner into the hallway. I look down the hall and let out an audible gasp and mutter to myself “shit”. This is not a place that I should be – wandering around an old abandoned meat factory in East Berlin – but at the same time I’m unexplainably drawn to it.

Every door in the hallway is open and this is about the time that some maniacal murderer in a hockey mask should be jumping out at me brandishing his pointy claws or bloody saw. I stop for a moment and then proceed cautiously peering around each door wondering if I will find anyone lurking in the shadows. Ghosts of old communist meat packing workers, old meat carcasses, or Jason…all seem equally scary to me – the girl who is scared of everything.

Situated in old East Berlin, the Alte Fleischfabrik (Old Meat Factory) was owned by the Konsumgenossenschaft (KGB), a consumer association, and was established in 1899. The KGB office buildings, meat factory, bakery, and power plant were built in 1909. These hearty brick buildings survived two world wars, but it appears that after the wall fell, so did the KGB. The buildings were abandoned, sold to private investors, and today remnants and odors of the old KGB business remains as if it were hit by a nuclear war.

Abandoned buildings
The Meat Factory on a snowy, cold, dark day – fitting.

As I peer around each door I find no one and I let out a sigh of relief. All I do find is more destroyed rooms littered with broken glass, dirt, dry wall, 30 year old sugar packets, and graffiti. One of the rooms I walk into even has a large hole in the wall. I can only imagine how someone broke through that wall. Was it the Incredible Hulk, was it a homeless person, was it a maniac with a sledge hammer, or was it a graffiti artists who wanted to somehow frame his work? As I stand looking through the hole in the wall, I opt for the latter as a beautiful, colorful heart stares back at me. I feel as if it’s beating, keeping this old expired factory alive.

Graffiti abandoned buildings
Graffiti framed by destruction.

For 4 hours I click away taking photo after photo of the abandoned meat packing plant, power plant and old bakery building complex as it snowed outside. It was hard to stay warm, but the fear inside of me kept my adrenaline pumping. However in reality I really didn’t have anything to be fearful of – besides my own imagination. I had permission to be wandering around this old destroyed factory – I was here on a Go2Know photo tour.

When I decided to come back to Berlin one of the first things I did was get in contact with the Go2Know people again. My visit to an old abandoned paper factory last year with them was a highlight of my time in Germany and I could hardly wait to do more of their tours. A Go2Know guide will lead you initially through the 3 main buildings, provide maps, and show you the most interesting photo opportunities. After that initial introduction you are free to roam on your own.

For an afternoon I roamed around old smoking ovens, cafeterias, locker rooms, offices, furnaces, boilers, and even a bowling alley hidden away in a dark corner basement. Each room left in disarray but also used as an urban street gallery. Go2Know offers a truly unique experience for photographers visiting Berlin.

More information:

  • If you go, be sure to bring a headlamp or flashlight – many of the areas are very dark.
  • Don’t wear sandals – there is glass and nails everywhere – sturdy footwear is a must.
  • Go2Know mainly gives their tours/assistance in German only. However they guides there normally know enough English to get by – and I have found that the other people on the tour can also assist with translating. Bottom line – don’t let the German stop you, you really don’t need to communicate much – you are there to wander and take photos.

Go2Know Website – (you’ll need it translated!)

Meat Factory Tour

Abandoned office
The corner office never looked so good.
Abandoned Buildings
Hallway of the Meat Factory
Abandoned Buildings
Random chairs and other office material is strewn about
Broken window
A broken window in the old bakery.
street art abandoned buildings
Graffiti mural lights up the old power building. The colorful glass cube windows in this building were haunting.
machines
If I turn it what will happen? Old Meat Factory machinery
abandoned buildings
Hallway leading to offices.
abandoned buildings
Shower stalls in the locker room at the bakery building
dead plant
Dead plants still sit in the office window sills dusted with snow.
abandoned buildings
Doors to the smoking ovens swing open leaving the whole building still smelling of smoke.
abandoned buildings
Meat racks strewn across the rooms intermix with mother nature.

See all of my Meat Factory Photography here

 

Disclosure: Thanks to Go with Oh Holiday Apartment Rental and Go2Know for hosting me on this great tour.  However, all of the opinions expressed here are my own – as you know how I love to speak my mind!

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    11 Comments

    1. For as derelict as it has become, it’s still striking and there’s a beauty to it… or maybe that’s your magic of crafting light and shadow through the lens? Either way, Kudos Sherry!

    2. Great photos Sherry, I love abandoned buildings. So many great photo opportunities, and the so many untold stories. I think I’ll have to go check this out once I actually do make my way to Berlin!

      1. I don’t have the actual address – I only went there as part of the photography tour. I followed a local friend there so I don’t really know where I was – I was just blindly following! I bet if you google it a bit you may find it. It was definitely in the city of Berlin – East Berlin.

    3. If that factory was near my town, the poor community would’ve take all the furniture like for instant those two chairs, the table and everything else in good condition, use it in their homes or sell it on the black market.

    4. Such haunting images. It’s interesting to me how abandoned and derelict buildings like this meat factory remain after so many years. And, that such every day and mundane items like the plants, food items, and coffee cup remain behind. Definitely haunting.

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