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The Airplane Graveyard in Thailand

The Airplane Graveyard in Thailand. The haunting photographs show the eerie tourist attractions where abandoned jets have been thrown to rot in Thailand. The derelict shells of two abandoned airplanes left by a cash-strapped investor in Thailand to rot. The MD-82 jets were earlier operated by Orient Thai Airlines, are now at the mercy of the elements in Bangkok after a business venture to use them as a bar failed.
This year, 36-year-old photographer Dax Ward took stunning images of the unconventional sites, to take a peek inside the stripped airplanes. The Bangkok-based photographer took hobby photography as a challenge.
He is actually a technology teacher who explains, the airplanes were supposedly placed here a few years ago by a foreign investor to create a special outdoor bar using the fuselage as a stage for the bands and service rooms for the bar crew. Hence, the project was a fiasco and the foreign investor left the site as it is. Currently, there’s no plan to move them, as the land upon which they rest is extremely expensive.
However the registration numbers of the two airplanes have been painted over, so it is difficult to decipher when the planes were operated or retired. The plane interiors were mostly stripped away to show the bare bones of massive crafts, but the carpeting of overhead bins and bathrooms remain intact.
Moreover, echoing the obliteration of a plane crash, oxygen masks, safety manuals, and other debris are also scattered about the hollowed-out craft. Indeed, it is very eerie in the graveyard. The children’s toys and other personal objects are scattered around and left by people who have stayed there for whatever reason, almost making it feel like a crash site.
The Thai culture often observes such places as haunted, no one has actually passed away at the location. The tourists are charged 300 baht per person and the place is looked after by a lady who lives on the site with her extended family in some converted fuselages.
Thailand is a country that thrives with culture, and such lively cultures tend to also include a deeply-rooted spiritual dimension. So, it is filled with ghost stories and irrational beliefs regarding spirits and locations which are haunted by them. Such dogmas of haunting can also arise simply because a site looks scary, which is why I think the graveyard would have such an image.
Hence, I’m pretty happy exploring the site alone and taking these photos. Also, there is generally someone hanging around the locations, be it human or animal, so I’m rarely completely alone. As I’m not acquainted with aeronautical design so it is interesting for me to see the diverse levels in the plane and to get a sense of its actual size.
In fact, it is a really impressive feat in engineering and physics that permits such large, heavy objects to be propelled through the sky at high speeds. Read More – Cars Graveyard – Traffic Stuck in Forest For 70 Years
Airplane Graveyard – Delving into the depths of the airplanes was a refreshing experience for the photographer, who reflected on the rarity of the opportunity to see inside one
Airplane Graveyard – Echoing the destruction of a plane crash, oxygen masks, safety manuals and other debris are also scattered about the hollowed out craft
In March this year, 36-year-old Bangkok-based photographer Dax Ward visited the unconventional site to take a peek inside the stripped airplanes
In Thai culture places like this are often seen as haunted, even if no one has actually passed away here’
It is a truly impressive feat in engineering and physics that allows for such large, heavy objects to be propelled through the sky at high speeds
Thailand as being ‘filled with ghost stories and superstitions regarding spirits and locations which are haunted by them’
The interiors of the plane have been mostly stripped away to reveal the bare bones of the giant crafts, but the carpeting, overhead bins and bathrooms remain intact
The pair of MD-82 jetliners, formerly operated by Orient Thai Airlines, are now at the mercy of the elements in Bangkok after a business venture to use them as a tourist attraction failed
The project was a fiasco and the foreign investor left the site as it is – as far as I know, there are currently no plans to move them, although the land upon which they rest is quite expensive’
These beliefs of a haunting can also arise simply because a place looks scary, which is why I think the plane graveyard would have such an image
These images capture the corpses of two abandoned airplanes, left by a cash-strapped investor in Thailand to rot away
Using a 360-degree imaging technique, Ward transforms the airplane graveyard into its very own little planet
Visiting tourists are charged 300 baht per person and the site is looked after by a lady who lives on the site with her extended family in some converted fuselages
Source: Dailymail
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