If you’ve visited a mostly empty mall close to closing time or a hotel that is almost completely vacant, you no doubt have been struck with a feeling of creeping unease, possibly mixed with some deja vu. You would not be alone in this feeling, and the ubiquity of smartphones these days means that internet users are documenting all the places that unsettle them.
The obsession with liminal spaces is a bit hard to explain, but there is no denying that it’s very real. Various internet groups exist where people share images of unsettling, eerie, or strangely nostalgic places they have encountered. So be sure to upvote your favorites and comment on how they made you feel.
#1 One Last Look Back
#2 Abandoned Subways In Paris Are Bring Re-Purposed As Swimming Pools
#3 Feels Like A Dream I’ve Had
To get a common question out of the way, liminal refers to a threshold or limit (the common root is visible here) that is at the bare minimum of getting a perceptible response. It has a somewhat morbid use as well, referring to a sort of state between life and death. As you can see in many of the images, the locations are hallways, corridors, parking lots, and other places that we have to pass through to get where we actually want to go.
While the actual emotion might be a lot older, it has only been studied recently. Before smartphones, we didn’t really have a good way to document these places, and who was going to waste physical film on a “bland” hotel hallway? Not to mention, most of us don’t spend that much time in these places, no doubt feeling a few, quick pangs of unease before walking through them to our final destination.
#4 Perfect Forest
#5 Oh
#6 Saw This On Twitter, Where The Nambia Desert Meets The Ocean. Feels Surreal
Now psychologists believe that these liminal spaces have a similar effect to the uncanny valley, where something appears familiar and known, but “off” in such a way as to provoke general creepiness mixed with recognition. These spaces are the same, familiar, as we have no doubt encountered hundreds, but lacking in the features we actually place in our own homes, personality, heart, and charm.
#7 It Continues Forever
#8 Petrol Station After A Good Downpour
#9 Dreaming Again?
If you pay attention, it’s noticeable that many of the images here depict places that are somewhat under-maintained or old. This adds to the liminal space uncanny valley, as this sort of disrepair is more common in non-personal constructions, like the utility areas of a mall or a small parking lot on the edge of a building. The wear-and-tear also makes us see these locations as old, evoking memories of places we’ve visited as a child, even if this nostalgia isn’t actually related to the place in the picture.
#10 I Took This Long Exposure Photo Of Wind Turbines, Felt Like It Fit Here
#11 “I Think I Have Wandered Too Far”
#12 No One At Sight, No Sounds, Just The Wind
Most of the locations are also somewhat strange in that no people are present. All of these buildings exist for the use of us humans, so to see them empty creates unease. Where are the people? Why is this place abandoned? Sometimes the operative emotion is sadness, like a playground that looks worn out and left to rot. Psychologically, we know that children used to play here, but no don’t and our brain starts to wonder why.
#13 Yesterday I Went To Windows Xp
#14 The Building Next To The Hotel Im Staying At
#15 This Is One Of The First Liminal Space Pictures I Made, Hope You Like It!
Despite its current popularity, as far as internet trends go, liminal spaces are quite new. The first “breakout” example originated in the notorious imageboard 4chan, with a picture of what looked like the backrooms of an office building, stripped of furnishing. Fluorescent lights, the old, yellow wallpaper, and no windows all came together to create a place that was somehow familiar, yet evocative of a cave, claustrophobic and dangerous.
#16 A Very Uneasy Feeling
#17 Warning
#18 Abandoned Nuclear Plant
When looking at this original example of liminal space, one can almost imagine the hum of the lights and the softness of the old carpet, despite only a handful of people having ever visited it. The important part is the isolation, as this “failure of presence” sticks out in our brains, putting us on edge even though the location has all the trappings of something we are seemingly familiar with.
#19 You’ve Reached The End
#21 My Girlfriend Works In A Bingo Hall And Sent Me This
#22 This Empty Beach Me & My Girlfriend Saw While Taking A Walk Last Night
#23 Forget
#24 This Was My Neighborhood Today
#25 Had No Idea A Part Of My School Looked Like This Until Last Night
#26 Only You
#27 Chinese Ghost City Look Like A World Boarder Of A Game
#28 My Hometown Movie Theater
#29 Road To The Unkown
#30 This Area In My School Courtyard Always Gives Me Such A Weird Feeling When I Walk Alone In It