It makes you wonder how significant it was to peoples lives building this tunnel. And how insignificant and forgotton and unappreciated it is now. Time makes everything seem like the work we do was done in vain. Imagine if humans go extinct this wont mean anything. This looks to me so alien as its a civilization we can never find or get back. Only remnants of a lonely structure that was once busy with life
They don't make artistic work like that anymore in my opinion. Maybe we will see an uptick soon as because of current 2020 events people are going to want to put their soul into things again like this.
you prolly dont give a damn but does someone know a method to get back into an instagram account? I was dumb lost my account password. I appreciate any assistance you can give me!
I just found your channel, drawn, because Mapperley is down the road from me I am disabled and so would NEVER be able to even get to the entrance, never mind go inside and climb about So, thankyou for being my eyes, that was quite amazing, I've subscribed and will be watching your previous 99 and many more in the future Take care and thanks again
I'm really pleased you enjoyed it and thank you so much for watching. It's always nice to put a smile on an individual's face 🙂 I've been back again this week, trying out a super bright new torch. So keep an eye out for it on here 😃
Awesome video. Something I would like to do myself but haven’t got the bottle. Thanks for going so far in, shame they’ve filled it in. Something magical about an old railway tunnel though.👍🏻
My Dad worked on the Railways, he was based at Clay Cross, he often talked about walking the tunnels, checking the lines for defects, (his main job was a plate layer). His team would have walked this tunnel and used many of the refuses along it. Thanks for showing it to us.
Ahh England's green and pleasant land. The Lake District, The Cotswolds ? Nahh, lets go look at the crap stack in Mapperley Tunnel! Excellent videos, very interesting and well put together. You go there so we don't have to. Keep it up and thank you for showing us interesting places that few have ever heard of.
As someone born and raised in Nottingham and a history buff I really appreciate these videos, railways are in my blood as my great grandfather was an engineer at Victoria station and for the GCR. Thankyou for helping me learn more about the routes my ancestors would have travelled.
@@TrekkingExploration Not sure nowadays but you could still get in from the Viccy centre end a few years ago, sadly the Clarendon end was filled in years ago.
Thank you for the update and tour. It’s a shame people use these areas for rubbish deposits. Takes away from the majesty of these former facilities. Cheers Ant!
As a former resident of Nottingham now back in Scotland I was drawn to this video after it came up on my recommendations,a thoroughly enjoyable watch and a reminder to just how much work went into building these railways,I have total admiration for the workers involved in the construction of this and the rest of the railways of the past.. Now subbed and looking forward to watching many of your superb videos..oh and belated congratulations on your 100th.. Many thanks 👍
Looking at some of the rubbish, the chunks of caravan and the commercial grocery items like the bed tray, giant brown sauce bottle and other things it seems someone pushed a burger or butty van down the hole, or scrapped one into a skip. Very nice explore, thanks for the upload.
Great video, i live nearby , you went there so I don't have to :) incidentally , on the other side I believe some folks can access parts of that tunnel from their properties. I heard a story about somebody using it as a wine cellar .
Here's the thing, to 'officially abandon' a tunnel it must either be filled in to the hilt, or remain open but with secured access for periodic inspection. If the tunnel is infilled to the hilt and the walls give in, not much is going to happen above ground, because there's very little movement. If the tunnel is left as an open space, then it must be subject to periodic inspection. e.g. the Chesterfield Canal Norwood tunnel beneath the M1 near Kiveton. It was abandoned because of a collapse in 1907, and is bricked up at both ends. Every 10 years or so the CRT break in to inspect it, because, you know, important national infrastructure above. There are videos of one or two of the inspections of that tunnel here on yootoob. BUT, there are many tunnels which have not (by current standards) been abandoned correctly. Go back to 1950/60s, do you think anyone cared in the slightest about whether a tunnel was filled to the hilt correctly? Nope Was legislation as stringent as it is now? Nope Thus, we have a plethora of badly filled tunnels.... and mines. Which has lead to a great number of sink holes here in the UK, sometimes beneath houses.... uncharted or badly/incorrectly capped mines. As Al Kaput wrote though, infilling is now bonkers. Old tunnels can now be put to very good use, especially as cycling is experiencing a massive boom here in the UK, with central government offering £2bn to improve cycle facilities across the UK. Through Derbyshire many tunnels have been reopened along the Tissington and Monsal trails. All now very busy with foot and cycle traffic. Good for people, good for the local economies. There is currently a large battle over the Queensbury tunnel in West Yorkshire, where Highways Agency want to spend a vast amount to abandon it, whereas the locals want it reopened and put to good use....at less cost. There are plenty of videos about it (again) here on yootoob.
If you knew anything about nottingham, then you would know there are tunnels spanning hundreds of miles, and large areas are undermined by over 1000yrs of people digging. Im told you can walk underground from arnold to long eaton, under the city center many buildings have tunnels and caves. Thousands used to live in them.
@@trapdoorspider9211 Perhaps they were not trying to hide anything at all. The tunnel came to the end of it's useful life, so far as the authorities could see at the time, "so we might as well fill it in then", and that is what they did. No need to go thinking there is some conspiracy to hide just because something is filled in.
Ant, well done on getting to you 100th vid, also congratulations on getting to the 3rd shaft, this is capped and filled as you say and is located in a garden at Norfolk Park off Gedling Road, bet the home owners don't know its there!!!! think a little further in the tunnel is the roof collapse that rendered low working speed though the tunnel, this is also shown with the roof braces throughout, although filled in, you can still get to the cutting, it is behind the scout building on weaverthorpe Road, the land does belong to the scouts but I'm sure if you go past and someone is there they will let you walk up the cutting, drove past the vent shaft today, it has now got concrete around it, not sure what they intend to do?? Anyway keep up the great videos mate👍👍 all the best, Mart.
Imagine being the house owner, not knowing about it. One day you decide to install a deep pond or septic tank, then you uncover that filled shaft. Thank you for watching and commenting 🙂
As far as accessible tunnels go, this one's in the worst condition I've seen. Anyone any ideas on the geology ? It appears some of it is rock - but even the portal is now misshapen with failure. It appears the cutting further on has been filled in after a bit and built on ! Yes, shaft is under parking area of no. 11 Norfolk Park ! I don't think I'd be too happy living in a house on top of that tunnel anywhere along its length!
@@millomweb theres a lot worse mate,believe me.That tunnel in the video is actually in really good condition,its just all the shite that has been shoved in it that has ruined it.If only i could add a picture of one local to me,you would see what bad condition really is,a lot of the brickwork has fallen in on itself along with a lot of chalk,you can actually walk up into the voids above where the roof of the tunnel once was.A very weird feeling
@@millomweb ive managed to do better than a picture,heres the video ua-cam.com/video/IqL9xbs2Vp8/v-deo.html I managed to cock up the editing after a few minutes it goes black so just skip forward 4 or 5 minutes
Interesting place but I wonder if those living above it are aware of the potential danger beneath their homes? 🤔😯 I like how you intergrated the view looking up through the vent shaft from below with the aerial drone perspective from above! 😎👍 That 'crap stack' could easily be the centre piece in the Tate Modern Gallery! 😯😁😎👍
Charge people a fiver to come and see the world renowned Mapperley Crap Stack lol I did have the shaft idea for a week or so, im glad it worked out Thanks for watching :)
Well done on reaching the 100th video and here's to the next 100! Great video as usual but you must be glad that you don't have to go back in that tunnel.
16:14 you can quite clearly see a mouse peg it across one of them iron supports! Brave you are Ant, god knows what was in that rubbish! All very interestingly unpleasant stuff! Cracking vlog mate, as per. 💯 yes! 😁👍😎🤘👊
That place just shows us what type of peoplel we have about us. Throws all their crap down a hole. That picture really does prove the point. I wish you had a much brighter light with you really struggled to see. But you did a great job. Well done mate.
Congratulations on your 100 it’s fantastic.as usual loved your video. What a shame the tunnel is such a mess. It is so beautiful. Just love the old tunnels. Thank you so much for taking me along. Please stay safe
Congrats on reaching - 100 ....Videos This was a great watch we werent sure how far you were going mate ...we saw your first video on this tunnel... And once again were riveted by this one... Thanks for all your hard work Ant...And we look forward to sharing many more Videos with you ....Keep up the great work ....Regards Frank & Lee....
Thanks both of you. I wasn't sure if I'd get there to the shaft or not, if I'd chicken out especially at 6 feet tall. I think I'll have a break for a couple of weeks now 🥱🤣
Nice video, thanks for showing the whole tunnel. A friend and I visited this tunnel for the first time today and found it fascinating we only made it to the first shaft which was beautiful the way the light comes down. Its a real shame that they never thought to make a trail out of this tunnel (and the the rest of the old rail network in nottingham), and also a real shame about the crap stack but such is human nature unfortunately. For anyone who’s not visited the tunnel it’s definitely worth going, even if you just make it to the entrance which in itself is fascinating. Makes you feel like your at the entrance of some ancient temple in a hidden valley. I hear there are plans to redevelop Gedling Country Park further and I don’t know if it will incorporate the tunnel entrance more when they do, i imagine if they do then they will put up better fencing to prevent people exploring the tunnel so its worth going to see it before they do that (if they do)
An interesting video...and a youtube video that actually has som nice music to help with the mood . I’ll definitely return to your channel to see more of your explorations.
Thanks for taking us along with you, what an I say- above and beyond! Awesome footage of the crap stack, sad really. Congratulations on the centenary, keep em coming👍🏴
The things that you go out to see are right up mine and the wife’s street, and to be honest we haven’t been able to get out whilst the Clovid things been happening for one reason or another. I always like to comment on a vid to encourage you to make more haha👍🏴
Mate that was truly something else, a great video to get to 100 up and you keep getting better. The production, presenting skills and background information are as good as most things you would see on many a channel on TV, congratulations. Looking forward tremendously to the next 100, especially Benniworth Tunnel!!
Gratz on 100 videos and what a great one it is. Brilliant choice of music for that last stretch, had me on the edge of my seat as you put the helmet on.
Trekking & Towpaths must admit I did also have visions of you following those cables and finding Wiley coyote at the end of them with a dynamite plunger
There is another tunnel that use to be at Kingthorpe flats in st Anns that would run through mapperley. Once again another really interesting piece of history,thanks man
Great video thanks for sharing. Did you have a gas detector with you when you where climbing over all that crud? I would advise you have one as you never know what gas you could stir up from the rotting material.
Yuck, slimey moldy enviroment, dangerious but cool as hell!! great video, I mean really people will toss anything down a hole, a beautiful mountain of crap, a monument to what you Brits call i believe fly tipping, absolutly amazing
Fish Plates are what would have joined the old style jointed track that gives that clackty clack sound, each join also acts as an expansion joint for the track to expand in hot weather. Modern track is continuously welded rail so can be up to a mile long before there’s a set of breathers that act as the expansion joint.
should have located the three shafts on the surface and filmed those too. The crap pile from the surface might be interesting, as was the third around about the place you gave up and came back.
The second shaft is in a private residence, I was able to visit once and can see no trace of the rubbish pile. The 3rd shaft is capped, no trace under tarmac and under a residence car park. Beyond shaft 3 underground I have seen a few images and there is nothing more to see.
What a blast from the past. Spent my whole childhood there. Grandma's idea of entertainment was to wheel me in my pushchair to watch the lorries being loaded at the colliery. Gedling School had a fantastic view of the pit railway. Last place we lived in that area was near the Mapperley Plains road junction virtually on top of the tunnel. Of course, the pit railway continued for years after the through line closed. So, to be clear, you got as far as the westernmost of the three ventilation shafts, the one on the Gedling Road Arnold side of the hill?
Great video mate,looks like you have the same fascination with tunnels as me.One thing I recommend is you getting a higher powered torch,tunnels are so hard to light up and some of the shots are a bit dim.5000 lumens will make all the difference
I used to live on the wells road, mapperley as a kid and played in part of a tunnel there. It was back filled with mounds of soil, a gap of a couple foot you could go in. It went back 30/40 foot maybe til completely blocked. I remember someone saying there was a train buried under the soil, but obviously that's not true. If you drive down from the top, so far down turn right to allotments and you'll be on top of the end of it.
101 Things To Do In A Shed , train buried in the tunnel a local legend we tried to find it several times but alas 70s touches mainly the one of the front of the Raleigh chopper didn’t give much more light than a candle 🕯 so we gave up in the end, I was desperately hoping to see the train appear from behind the mound 🙄 happy memories of playing in all the tunnels in Mapperley especially all the ones running through Woodthorpe park, sadly no more.
Those Heavy Bars with the Holes in are Fishplates they are used to secure two lengths of (Usually) Bullhead Rail Together! Along a lot of disused railways you will find them as well as sleepers and Chairs
The UK is one of the only places on video I've saw thus far where they just push rubbish in tunnels and caves to block them off... I've never saw that personally or on videos in the US. Really cool video. That had to be a surreal explore alone.
Well done like watching Martin Zero going down a (very large) mousehole.. Why infill ? If u want to stop access gate it but infill stops it draining properly..
Amazing video and thanks for exploring on everyone’s behalf! With regards to the 2nd shaft, you said it was somewhere in the trees but you can actually see it on Google Maps. Looks like it’s in the Scout Hut back garden, so maybe it’s the kids there throwing rubbish down? Think the Scout Hut has now gone to make way for the Access Road but would imagine the 2nd shaft remains.
15:51 the brick with the diamond pattern on it looks like one of the Victoria Diamond Jubilee bricks. If you look on the other side it should say "1837-1897 DIAMOND JUBILEE"
It's a cast steel , water ,Toby , hydrant cover , not a brick , its sitting top cover toward the camera , moved lot of these in my civil engineering days .
@@fava7753 No it isn't, it's a 10" X5" X2" Staffordshire blue diamond paver, probably made by either Barnett & Beddows,(trading under the name of ATLAS) or by Gibsons Buckley. Have a closer look. It is too thick and the diamond pattern is too big to be a manhole cover.
Air shaft no. 3 is under the car parking area to the left, just inside the entrance gates to number 11 Norfolk Park. Here: www.google.com/maps/place/52%C2%B059'32.6%22N+1%C2%B006'37.7%22W/@52.9923898,-1.1110052,175m/data=!3m2!1e3!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x0:0x0!7e2!8m2!3d52.9923885!4d-1.1104585!5m1!1e4
I live so close to this iv always wanted to go have a look I was told you couldn’t get into it but now I know you can I might :) I wouldn’t want to buy one of the new houses that’s above it
It's currently still possible... I've been 3 times this year and the entrance is exactly the same each time. Not sure what's going to happen with it. Thanks for watching 🙂
Trekking & Towpaths you should have a look around Pleasley vale mills it’s a good walk there is a delivery tunnel 80 foot up in the back wall behind mill 1 I’d love to see where it goes but being 80 foot up haha
For more information ask Nottingham City council and ask them why it is the way it is and who pays up when your brand new home goes crashing into the tunnel.Its the same council that allows demo works at 6.00 am Sunday morning on a large factory roof which was asbestos and when i phoned them Monday morning and they said there was no risk not to mention the factory is owned by a former lord mayor of Nottingham.
Brilliant video. I love stuff like this. First time I've watched one of your videos. If you like exploring old abandoned railway lines and tunnels, there is one in a place called Queensburry, in Bradford, West Yorkshire. That's a good one. I've been down to it, its interesting, worth checking out, at least on line if you personally can visit there.
Been upto the 3rd shaft myself. Gets pretty freaky the further you push on, ontop of the infill. The portal certainly looks alot worse than when I was last there (been in 5 or 6 times) and bound to fail anytime soon. The local council were going on about making a viewing platform so you can look inside but not physically enter the tunnel but as always nothings happened with it. As for in filling, Bolsover tunnel is infilled end to end in the same manner with local colliery waste. Got tons of photos and info on this tunnel.
Reminds me of an ancient lava tube I explored near Mt. St. Helens in Washington State. Got narrower and narrower until I could go no further. Was feeling very claustrophobic at that point.
Makes me wonder if any of that infill came from the demolition of Victoria Station. BR wouldn't likely have wanted to pay for disposal when they owned abandoned tunnels that could be backfilled.
There's another video about the tunnel with someone commenting that a local builder was illegally dumping rubbish for years down shaft 2, behind the scout hall. They say that he was prosecuuted and fined thousands eventually! Should have made them clear it up too!
A great video i wonder with some of these old lines being put back in to operation to increase the rail network capacity,............ any chance of this line having a new life.
Great vid, was really hoping to see outside shots when you reached shaft 1 for some context and you delivered! Dodgy apostrophe on trees but worse things have happened 😉
Infill or dumping you choose lol, while the fill will support the sides its not ideal but wont collapse the higher filled section more than 5 feet from above and will have no sideways movement, no houses will be built on the tunnel section as its known to be there unless its properly filled, it will probably be a green space, its the unknown, unmapped holes or like round the collieries where the houses were built then they extended the mines under the houses way back when safety wasnt as important as profit that are bigger problems. The NCB have inherited alot of litteral money pits when they nationalised the industry and it remains their problem even though it doesnt exist anymore as the closed pits were mostly not sold off. The Coal board has to inspect and make safe any pits under infrastructure and deal with foundation issues if they happen. The same applies to rail tunnels but they are infinitely easier to find.
What do you know about the west portal? the cutting is still there its on some cub scouts land but i really want to know if the brickwork is still there and its just filled in
@@TrekkingExploration Me too but i have a feeling if i phone they will just say no anyway its gone, when really there hiding a perfectly intact portal and thats where they have their camp fire circle 😂
just discovered this. Absolutely fascinating. Thanks for your work in preparing it. The unwanted 'music' is annoying though... have to keep turning volume up and down to get rid of it.
Another great video Ant, I like the choice of incidental music, it adds to the atmosphere. I can never quite understand the thinking behind trying to fill in a tunnel, if you drop stuff down a shaft it only spreads out a few yards either side and if you come in from the portals you can't get material tight enough to the roof to support the ground above. Seems to me the only way to do it would be to dynamite the roof in and allow the land above to slump down then level it of at the top.
Yes it does seem like it's a lot of time and effort to do half a job. Especially this One that really is only half way 🤔 Thank you for watching and commenting 🙂
The metal supports and the now rotted wood are a puzzle, not aware of any brick lined tunnel with these supports, could they be formwork used in the construction that was meant to be removed but for some reason was left in place, the use of wood in a damp tunnel does suggest it was only meant to be temporary.
What 'what three words' can I use to find this? I looked for hours the other day and came up with nothing ..there's some major landscape works happening in Gedling park right now
Me and a group of friends did this back in 1984 at the height of the miners strike!!!! With no torch all we had was my mate Jon's zippo lighter. I remember it being very wet inside. My mate Jon had done this on his own before. I think he must of had balls of steal. When we came out and went up onto the old coal wharf we saw dozens of coppers coming over the gates. We made a break for it and legged it. I was much quicker and fitter as a 15 year old back in those day's. The coppers were Thames Valley Police sent up to deal with the striking miners. Most of us got away but poor old Jon got caught arrested put in the back of a van and interrogated. These were hard police proper coppers not like the pussy cats today!!!!!! They took him home were his mother was waiting for him. She wasn't pleased to put it mildly. Next time I went to call for him I thought she was going to clobber me with a frying pan!!!! I hadn't thought about this for years until I saw this video. Fond memories the things we all did as kids!!!!
Love this wee story, aye. It reminded me of the dangerous shit I used to get myself into with my mates and then being huckled by the police. Boy did we get our arse's skelped hard from our Ma's, still good memories all the same. I still talk about this stuff with my Ma and she is like "Aye I didnae skelp ye because of what you did, I skelped ye for getting fking caught" lmao.
@@EzeePosseTV When I got home that day my mum said "were you been, you look like you've been down the pit". I said I have. I was covered in coal dust. Then I told her she might be getting a visit from the police. We never did though. She told me to go and get a bath. A couple of weeks later we were back on the coal wharf up to even more mischief. We started up a big digger and had a go in it. Problem was we couldn't switch the bloody thing off. So we left it running and legged it. We heard the police came up to turn it off. Yes indeed we were always up to something and if we got caught it was a good hiding. I wish my mum and dad were still here to chat to. Fond memories.
@@brickhead48 Look for a film called " coal not dole " ( on here ? ) Shows gedling pit and the hundreds of coppers at the miners strike. Very good programme.
I feel admiration for those Who built this tunnel laying millions and millions of bricks one by one....
It's absolutely true. Monumental effort
It makes you wonder how significant it was to peoples lives building this tunnel. And how insignificant and forgotton and unappreciated it is now. Time makes everything seem like the work we do was done in vain. Imagine if humans go extinct this wont mean anything. This looks to me so alien as its a civilization we can never find or get back. Only remnants of a lonely structure that was once busy with life
They don't make artistic work like that anymore in my opinion. Maybe we will see an uptick soon as because of current 2020 events people are going to want to put their soul into things again like this.
you prolly dont give a damn but does someone know a method to get back into an instagram account?
I was dumb lost my account password. I appreciate any assistance you can give me!
@Braylen Wyatt instablaster =)
I just found your channel, drawn, because Mapperley is down the road from me
I am disabled and so would NEVER be able to even get to the entrance, never mind go inside and climb about
So, thankyou for being my eyes, that was quite amazing, I've subscribed and will be watching your previous 99 and many more in the future
Take care and thanks again
I'm really pleased you enjoyed it and thank you so much for watching. It's always nice to put a smile on an individual's face 🙂
I've been back again this week, trying out a super bright new torch. So keep an eye out for it on here 😃
You got some balls going to shaft No 3. I have been to the portal in 2012 but never in the tunnel. It's now on my to do list.
Awesome video. Something I would like to do myself but haven’t got the bottle. Thanks for going so far in, shame they’ve filled it in. Something magical about an old railway tunnel though.👍🏻
I chickened out the first time i went in January then thought... i'll go for it.
Thanks for watching and pleased you enjoyed it :)
top quality craftsmanship...then the demise...then waste management...£££
great video
thankyou
The men who created and did the digging and brickwork on this immense and wonderful tunnel don’t deserve the state it is in now:(
My Dad worked on the Railways, he was based at Clay Cross, he often talked about walking the tunnels, checking the lines for defects, (his main job was a plate layer). His team would have walked this tunnel and used many of the refuses along it. Thanks for showing it to us.
Whats post your dad railways and selrey
Thats fantastic, i love hearing about things like that :) Thanks for watching :)
Happened across your channel while searching the Severn Tunnel, excellent video, superbly fitting music. Now subscribed.
Hi Mike thanks so much I'm glad you enjoyed it too 🙂
production quality superb, pace of content brilliant, Audio tracks used perfect, outstanding work.
Much appreciated! Thanks so much :)
Great presentation of Mapperley tunnel...you were very thorough, leaving no stone unturned. Thanks for that👍
Thanks very much 😃 Glad you enjoyed it and thank you for commenting 🙂
Wow !! That was brilliant. What a place
Martin, get yourself down Notts!!!! Love your vids too mate, keep up your great work 👍 Mart.
Thanks Martin. It was nice to pluck up the courage. See you soon 😀
Have you calmed down yet ? ;)
Ahh England's green and pleasant land. The Lake District, The Cotswolds ? Nahh, lets go look at the crap stack in Mapperley Tunnel! Excellent videos, very interesting and well put together. You go there so we don't have to. Keep it up and thank you for showing us interesting places that few have ever heard of.
As someone born and raised in Nottingham and a history buff I really appreciate these videos, railways are in my blood as my great grandfather was an engineer at Victoria station and for the GCR. Thankyou for helping me learn more about the routes my ancestors would have travelled.
Its an absolute pleasure. I'm earning as i go too and its great to share the experiance :)
Fascinating, I used to as a lad walk the tunnel from Clarendon College to Viccy centre. Brought back great memories , thanks for a great video
Sadly that's one I don't think I'll ever get the opportunity to see 😟
Thank you for watching 🙂
@@TrekkingExploration Not sure nowadays but you could still get in from the Viccy centre end a few years ago, sadly the Clarendon end was filled in years ago.
Forest Flyer, We use to do the same.
Looks like a dodgy skip company found the shaft and fly tipped 100 of skips down it. And made a fortune doing so.
Crazy hey. Thanks for watching
More than likely by the look of the pile
Thank you for the update and tour. It’s a shame people use these areas for rubbish deposits. Takes away from the majesty of these former facilities. Cheers Ant!
As a former resident of Nottingham now back in Scotland I was drawn to this video after it came up on my recommendations,a thoroughly enjoyable watch and a reminder to just how much work went into building these railways,I have total admiration for the workers involved in the construction of this and the rest of the railways of the past.. Now subbed and looking forward to watching many of your superb videos..oh and belated congratulations on your 100th.. Many thanks 👍
Looking at some of the rubbish, the chunks of caravan and the commercial grocery items like the bed tray, giant brown sauce bottle and other things it seems someone pushed a burger or butty van down the hole, or scrapped one into a skip. Very nice explore, thanks for the upload.
Thanks so much for watching. Everytime i have been the rubbish pile seems to move, other items appear lol
Great stuff, 100 not out, looking forward to the next 100.
Thank you much appreciated 🙂
Great video, i live nearby , you went there so I don't have to :) incidentally , on the other side I believe some folks can access parts of that tunnel from their properties. I heard a story about somebody using it as a wine cellar .
Great video, amazing colours on the walls and floor, great to see the crap stack and all the old bottles etc
Thank you. That crap stack is slowly coming down
Congratulations on reaching 100th video , Enjoyed this one , Looking forward for the next one , Thanks.
Thanks Liam. Much appreciated 🙂
Infilling a tunnel is bonkers. It will rot and eventually cave in. In the meantime, a housing estate gets built on top. It won't end well.
Yep, seems odd just doing half a Job too
Here's the thing, to 'officially abandon' a tunnel it must either be filled in to the hilt, or remain open but with secured access for periodic inspection.
If the tunnel is infilled to the hilt and the walls give in, not much is going to happen above ground, because there's very little movement.
If the tunnel is left as an open space, then it must be subject to periodic inspection. e.g. the Chesterfield Canal Norwood tunnel beneath the M1 near Kiveton. It was abandoned because of a collapse in 1907, and is bricked up at both ends. Every 10 years or so the CRT break in to inspect it, because, you know, important national infrastructure above. There are videos of one or two of the inspections of that tunnel here on yootoob.
BUT, there are many tunnels which have not (by current standards) been abandoned correctly. Go back to 1950/60s, do you think anyone cared in the slightest about whether a tunnel was filled to the hilt correctly? Nope
Was legislation as stringent as it is now? Nope
Thus, we have a plethora of badly filled tunnels.... and mines. Which has lead to a great number of sink holes here in the UK, sometimes beneath houses.... uncharted or badly/incorrectly capped mines.
As Al Kaput wrote though, infilling is now bonkers. Old tunnels can now be put to very good use, especially as cycling is experiencing a massive boom here in the UK, with central government offering £2bn to improve cycle facilities across the UK.
Through Derbyshire many tunnels have been reopened along the Tissington and Monsal trails. All now very busy with foot and cycle traffic. Good for people, good for the local economies.
There is currently a large battle over the Queensbury tunnel in West Yorkshire, where Highways Agency want to spend a vast amount to abandon it, whereas the locals want it reopened and put to good use....at less cost. There are plenty of videos about it (again) here on yootoob.
If you knew anything about nottingham, then you would know there are tunnels spanning hundreds of miles, and large areas are undermined by over 1000yrs of people digging. Im told you can walk underground from arnold to long eaton, under the city center many buildings have tunnels and caves. Thousands used to live in them.
? Is why did they backfill it what potential tunnel was they possibly trying to hide??
@@trapdoorspider9211 Perhaps they were not trying to hide anything at all.
The tunnel came to the end of it's useful life, so far as the authorities could see at the time, "so we might as well fill it in then", and that is what they did.
No need to go thinking there is some conspiracy to hide just because something is filled in.
Ant, well done on getting to you 100th vid, also congratulations on getting to the 3rd shaft, this is capped and filled as you say and is located in a garden at Norfolk Park off Gedling Road, bet the home owners don't know its there!!!! think a little further in the tunnel is the roof collapse that rendered low working speed though the tunnel, this is also shown with the roof braces throughout, although filled in, you can still get to the cutting, it is behind the scout building on weaverthorpe Road, the land does belong to the scouts but I'm sure if you go past and someone is there they will let you walk up the cutting, drove past the vent shaft today, it has now got concrete around it, not sure what they intend to do?? Anyway keep up the great videos mate👍👍 all the best, Mart.
Imagine being the house owner, not knowing about it. One day you decide to install a deep pond or septic tank, then you uncover that filled shaft.
Thank you for watching and commenting 🙂
As far as accessible tunnels go, this one's in the worst condition I've seen. Anyone any ideas on the geology ? It appears some of it is rock - but even the portal is now misshapen with failure. It appears the cutting further on has been filled in after a bit and built on !
Yes, shaft is under parking area of no. 11 Norfolk Park ! I don't think I'd be too happy living in a house on top of that tunnel anywhere along its length!
@@TrekkingExploration think they do.... Went to look at a property there and the tunnel and shafts came up on a survey/search👍
@@millomweb theres a lot worse mate,believe me.That tunnel in the video is actually in really good condition,its just all the shite that has been shoved in it that has ruined it.If only i could add a picture of one local to me,you would see what bad condition really is,a lot of the brickwork has fallen in on itself along with a lot of chalk,you can actually walk up into the voids above where the roof of the tunnel once was.A very weird feeling
@@millomweb ive managed to do better than a picture,heres the video
ua-cam.com/video/IqL9xbs2Vp8/v-deo.html
I managed to cock up the editing after a few minutes it goes black so just skip forward 4 or 5 minutes
Interesting place but I wonder if those living above it are aware of the potential danger beneath their homes? 🤔😯
I like how you intergrated the view looking up through the vent shaft from below with the aerial drone perspective from above! 😎👍
That 'crap stack' could easily be the centre piece in the Tate Modern Gallery! 😯😁😎👍
Charge people a fiver to come and see the world renowned Mapperley Crap Stack lol
I did have the shaft idea for a week or so, im glad it worked out
Thanks for watching :)
Well done on reaching the 100th video and here's to the next 100! Great video as usual but you must be glad that you don't have to go back in that tunnel.
I really don't see any need to go back 🥺
Thank you for watching as always 😀
16:14 you can quite clearly see a mouse peg it across one of them iron supports! Brave you are Ant, god knows what was in that rubbish! All very interestingly unpleasant stuff! Cracking vlog mate, as per. 💯 yes! 😁👍😎🤘👊
I certainly had a good shower when I got home 🤣
Thanks for watching and commenting 🙂
That place just shows us what type of peoplel we have about us. Throws all their crap down a hole. That picture really does prove the point. I wish you had a much brighter light with you really struggled to see. But you did a great job. Well done mate.
Congratulations on your 100 it’s fantastic.as usual loved your video. What a shame the tunnel is such a mess. It is so beautiful. Just love the old tunnels. Thank you so much for taking me along. Please stay safe
Thank you for always being here ❤️
My pleasure 💕
Nice revisit, love the moody music. Rail joiners are known as fish-plates but don`t ask me why. Take care on Monday.
Hey Hazel thanks for watching. Yes I'm looking forward to tomorrow 🙂
The 'fish' comes from nautical circles - where they were/are used to strengthen masts ! Why 'fish', I know not.
I went down there myself with a few friends about 20 years ago and went as far as the crap stack
It's a strange and eerie place. I went back a few months ago and went beyond the crap stack. Thanks for watching 🙂
Loved the eerie music when you were deep inside the tunnel...Scary place to be on your own...🤔😳🇬🇧
Your explorations always leave me in awe. Congrats on #100 J. Cheers!
Thanks very much for your kind comment 😊
@@TrekkingExploration You are quite welcome! Stay safe out there
Another gem. Between you and Martin zero who needs a tele your stuff is miles better!
Super kind words and thank you so much for watching and commenting 🙂
Congrats on reaching - 100 ....Videos This was a great watch we werent sure how far you were going mate ...we saw your first video on this tunnel... And once again were riveted by this one... Thanks for all your hard work Ant...And we look forward to sharing many more Videos with you ....Keep up the great work ....Regards Frank & Lee....
Thanks both of you. I wasn't sure if I'd get there to the shaft or not, if I'd chicken out especially at 6 feet tall. I think I'll have a break for a couple of weeks now 🥱🤣
Nice video, thanks for showing the whole tunnel. A friend and I visited this tunnel for the first time today and found it fascinating we only made it to the first shaft which was beautiful the way the light comes down.
Its a real shame that they never thought to make a trail out of this tunnel (and the the rest of the old rail network in nottingham), and also a real shame about the crap stack but such is human nature unfortunately. For anyone who’s not visited the tunnel it’s definitely worth going, even if you just make it to the entrance which in itself is fascinating. Makes you feel like your at the entrance of some ancient temple in a hidden valley.
I hear there are plans to redevelop Gedling Country Park further and I don’t know if it will incorporate the tunnel entrance more when they do, i imagine if they do then they will put up better fencing to prevent people exploring the tunnel so its worth going to see it before they do that (if they do)
Another great watch. Well done on reaching 100.
Thanks Richard much appreciated 🙂
An interesting video...and a youtube video that actually has som nice music to help with the mood . I’ll definitely return to your channel to see more of your explorations.
Thank you for watching and for the kind comment. I'm actually just on my way back to this location this minute to do a little more 🙂
Thanks for taking us along with you, what an I say- above and beyond! Awesome footage of the crap stack, sad really. Congratulations on the centenary, keep em coming👍🏴
Thanks Martin. The Crap Stack phrase seems to be sticking after I said it in the first visit 🤣
Thanks for always watching and commenting 🙂
The things that you go out to see are right up mine and the wife’s street, and to be honest we haven’t been able to get out whilst the Clovid things been happening for one reason or another. I always like to comment on a vid to encourage you to make more haha👍🏴
Mate that was truly something else, a great video to get to 100 up and you keep getting better. The production, presenting skills and background information are as good as most things you would see on many a channel on TV, congratulations. Looking forward tremendously to the next 100, especially Benniworth Tunnel!!
Thanks very much. Benniworth is coming soon.....
Just need a short break from railways 🤣
Gratz on 100 videos and what a great one it is. Brilliant choice of music for that last stretch, had me on the edge of my seat as you put the helmet on.
Cheers Paul. I'm glad I plucked the courage up. Dudley Tunnel got scratched off today 😀
Trekking & Towpaths must admit I did also have visions of you following those cables and finding Wiley coyote at the end of them with a dynamite plunger
@@PaulMaloney 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
There is another tunnel that use to be at Kingthorpe flats in st Anns that would run through mapperley. Once again another really interesting piece of history,thanks man
Congratulations on the 100th any, great video as always.
Thank you very much! Really appreciated
Great video, watching the footage of going up over the infill gave me a chill. No wonder you don't want to go back. 👍
Thank you. I'd like to think that's it. I'll go back if they decide to do something with it 🙂
Nice one yet another good little film.
Glad you enjoyed it Matthew
Congratulations on 100 vlogs, thanks for sharing them, Brick making must have been the biggest industry in the day.
It must have been the largest industry going at one time 😮
Well done on reaching your 100th. ! You must have orbes of steel going in there, it looks fit to drop anytime, great to see though.
Thank you for watching and commenting 🙂
I definitely feel no need to ever go back
More importantly. We'll done to me for getting the 100th comment.
Great content! Great music.!! Keep it up!!!
👍🏼😎👍🏼
Cheers for that. Thanks for watching 🙂
Great video thanks for sharing. Did you have a gas detector with you when you where climbing over all that crud? I would advise you have one as you never know what gas you could stir up from the rotting material.
Looked like the caravan/trailer still had the registration plate - can't believe you didn't expose it!
Epic, it is like the moon beyond the crap stack.
Thankyou so much :)
Yuck, slimey moldy enviroment, dangerious but cool as hell!! great video, I mean really people will toss anything down a hole, a beautiful mountain of crap, a monument to what you Brits call i believe fly tipping, absolutly amazing
100 well done , very informative videos looking forward to your next 100!!!!
Thanks Graham, much appreciated and thank you for watching and commenting 🙂
I only live about 5 miles from there, but I didn't even know it existed. Brilliant.
Excellent 😀 Thank you so much for watching 🙂
Worth the watch for the little rock pool near the end
Congratulations on 100! I wouldn't have climbed on top of that fill, though.
Thanks for watching Thomas. I have no plans to ever go back 🙂
Epic and the music is wonderfully atmospheric!!
Thanks for watching and you're kind comment 😊
Fish Plates are what would have joined the old style jointed track that gives that clackty clack sound, each join also acts as an expansion joint for the track to expand in hot weather.
Modern track is continuously welded rail so can be up to a mile long before there’s a set of breathers that act as the expansion joint.
should have located the three shafts on the surface and filmed those too. The crap pile from the surface might be interesting, as was the third around about the place you gave up and came back.
The second shaft is in a private residence, I was able to visit once and can see no trace of the rubbish pile. The 3rd shaft is capped, no trace under tarmac and under a residence car park. Beyond shaft 3 underground I have seen a few images and there is nothing more to see.
@@TrekkingExploration if you can see light might want to give them a heads up they may be about to have a sink hole then..
What a blast from the past. Spent my whole childhood there. Grandma's idea of entertainment was to wheel me in my pushchair to watch the lorries being loaded at the colliery. Gedling School had a fantastic view of the pit railway. Last place we lived in that area was near the Mapperley Plains road junction virtually on top of the tunnel. Of course, the pit railway continued for years after the through line closed.
So, to be clear, you got as far as the westernmost of the three ventilation shafts, the one on the Gedling Road Arnold side of the hill?
Great video mate,looks like you have the same fascination with tunnels as me.One thing I recommend is you getting a higher powered torch,tunnels are so hard to light up and some of the shots are a bit dim.5000 lumens will make all the difference
Congratulations on the first 100. Cracking video as always 👍
Thanks Stephen, thanks for being here since the beggining 🙂
I used to live on the wells road, mapperley as a kid and played in part of a tunnel there. It was back filled with mounds of soil, a gap of a couple foot you could go in. It went back 30/40 foot maybe til completely blocked. I remember someone saying there was a train buried under the soil, but obviously that's not true. If you drive down from the top, so far down turn right to allotments and you'll be on top of the end of it.
101 Things To Do In A Shed , train buried in the tunnel a local legend we tried to find it several times but alas 70s touches mainly the one of the front of the Raleigh chopper didn’t give much more light than a candle 🕯 so we gave up in the end, I was desperately hoping to see the train appear from behind the mound 🙄 happy memories of playing in all the tunnels in Mapperley especially all the ones running through Woodthorpe park, sadly no more.
Those Heavy Bars with the Holes in are Fishplates they are used to secure two lengths of (Usually) Bullhead Rail Together! Along a lot of disused railways you will find them as well as sleepers and Chairs
The UK is one of the only places on video I've saw thus far where they just push rubbish in tunnels and caves to block them off... I've never saw that personally or on videos in the US. Really cool video. That had to be a surreal explore alone.
I’m very interesting very beautiful building design and Victoria architecture very good
Thanks for watching and commenting 🙂
Well done like watching Martin Zero going down a (very large) mousehole..
Why infill ?
If u want to stop access gate it but infill stops it draining properly..
When you think of the effort and man Hours to half fill it, you do wonder what the point was?
Thanks for watching and commenting 🙂
The infilling came after the second collapse, it's unstable ground, which is why there's so much water.
Amazing video and thanks for exploring on everyone’s behalf! With regards to the 2nd shaft, you said it was somewhere in the trees but you can actually see it on Google Maps. Looks like it’s in the Scout Hut back garden, so maybe it’s the kids there throwing rubbish down? Think the Scout Hut has now gone to make way for the Access Road but would imagine the 2nd shaft remains.
As kids we would go through the victoria center tunnel in the town center and it would bring you out at the forest rec ground....
Gedling Road, Arnold Lane junction on Mapperley top.
Scout group hut called Pepper pots. Pepper pot visible from the road.
Top video, really good, what was the music , really effective
15:51 the brick with the diamond pattern on it looks like one of the Victoria Diamond Jubilee bricks. If you look on the other side it should say "1837-1897 DIAMOND JUBILEE"
It's a cast steel , water ,Toby , hydrant cover , not a brick , its sitting top cover toward the camera , moved lot of these in my civil engineering days .
@@fava7753 No it isn't, it's a 10" X5" X2" Staffordshire blue diamond paver, probably made by either Barnett & Beddows,(trading under the name of ATLAS) or by Gibsons Buckley. Have a closer look. It is too thick and the diamond pattern is too big to be a manhole cover.
New subscriber as well. It was a brilliant video. Congratulations to 100. 👏👏
Thank you 😀
Air shaft no. 3 is under the car parking area to the left, just inside the entrance gates to number 11 Norfolk Park. Here:
www.google.com/maps/place/52%C2%B059'32.6%22N+1%C2%B006'37.7%22W/@52.9923898,-1.1110052,175m/data=!3m2!1e3!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x0:0x0!7e2!8m2!3d52.9923885!4d-1.1104585!5m1!1e4
Used to play in there as a kid. 👍
I live so close to this iv always wanted to go have a look I was told you couldn’t get into it but now I know you can I might :) I wouldn’t want to buy one of the new houses that’s above it
It's currently still possible... I've been 3 times this year and the entrance is exactly the same each time. Not sure what's going to happen with it.
Thanks for watching 🙂
Trekking & Towpaths I’m surprised they haven’t completely filled it with the new estate being done above it. Is the entrance easy to get to
Trekking & Towpaths you should have a look around Pleasley vale mills it’s a good walk there is a delivery tunnel 80 foot up in the back wall behind mill 1 I’d love to see where it goes but being 80 foot up haha
@@nuttychickenman I'll have an internet search this evening 🙂
For more information ask Nottingham City council and ask them why it is the way it is and who pays up when your brand new home goes crashing into the tunnel.Its the same council that allows demo works at 6.00 am Sunday morning on a large factory roof which was asbestos and when i phoned them Monday morning and they said there was no risk not to mention the factory is owned by a former lord mayor of Nottingham.
Brilliant video. I love stuff like this.
First time I've watched one of your videos.
If you like exploring old abandoned railway lines and tunnels, there is one in a place called Queensburry, in Bradford, West Yorkshire. That's a good one. I've been down to it, its interesting, worth checking out, at least on line if you personally can visit there.
Been upto the 3rd shaft myself. Gets pretty freaky the further you push on, ontop of the infill. The portal certainly looks alot worse than when I was last there (been in 5 or 6 times) and bound to fail anytime soon. The local council were going on about making a viewing platform so you can look inside but not physically enter the tunnel but as always nothings happened with it.
As for in filling, Bolsover tunnel is infilled end to end in the same manner with local colliery waste. Got tons of photos and info on this tunnel.
I really don't think i have the nerve for Bolsover lol
@@TrekkingExploration dont think youd get in anyway. Believe the portals to be buried and theres only manhole covers as access.
6:01 Fishplates chap. Looks like there are lots of good bits of railwayana in that tunnel
Thanks pal. 😀
Reminds me of an ancient lava tube I explored near Mt. St. Helens in Washington State. Got narrower and narrower until I could go no further. Was feeling very claustrophobic at that point.
I could get near it but no drone light 😟
Top man keep em coming very best regards 👍
Thanks Andrew. Much appreciated 🙂
Makes me wonder if any of that infill came from the demolition of Victoria Station. BR wouldn't likely have wanted to pay for disposal when they owned abandoned tunnels that could be backfilled.
When I saw what looked like toilet tiles and blue platform edge tiles I even wondered if some of it was nearby Daybrook Station
There's another video about the tunnel with someone commenting that a local builder was illegally dumping rubbish for years down shaft 2, behind the scout hall. They say that he was prosecuuted and fined thousands eventually! Should have made them clear it up too!
A great video i wonder with some of these old lines being put back in to operation to increase the rail network capacity,............ any chance of this line having a new life.
The track bed either side has almost vanished sadly :(
Thankyou for watching :)
Nice One Interesting Tunnel Cheers
Thanks for watching 🙂
Great vid, was really hoping to see outside shots when you reached shaft 1 for some context and you delivered! Dodgy apostrophe on trees but worse things have happened 😉
I have no idea how i let that slip with the apostrophe, never usually let stuff slip
Thanks for watching, glad you enjoyed it
Consistent quality ❤️
Thanks buddy 😊
Well done on your 100th video. 👍
Thanks so much 😀
Infill or dumping you choose lol, while the fill will support the sides its not ideal but wont collapse the higher filled section more than 5 feet from above and will have no sideways movement, no houses will be built on the tunnel section as its known to be there unless its properly filled, it will probably be a green space, its the unknown, unmapped holes or like round the collieries where the houses were built then they extended the mines under the houses way back when safety wasnt as important as profit that are bigger problems. The NCB have inherited alot of litteral money pits when they nationalised the industry and it remains their problem even though it doesnt exist anymore as the closed pits were mostly not sold off. The Coal board has to inspect and make safe any pits under infrastructure and deal with foundation issues if they happen. The same applies to rail tunnels but they are infinitely easier to find.
Wow its amazing inside how difficult was it to build that great piece of architecture still standing
What do you know about the west portal? the cutting is still there its on some cub scouts land but i really want to know if the brickwork is still there and its just filled in
I've been flirting with the Idea of asking to visit for some time now... I'll see what can be done 👍
@@TrekkingExploration Me too but i have a feeling if i phone they will just say no anyway its gone, when really there hiding a perfectly intact portal and thats where they have their camp fire circle 😂
If you do ill come along 👍
portal is still there....just filled to the ceiling when you get about 10 feet in....
bloody good music in this video.
Congratulations, great video and doing that tunnel on your own 👍
Thank you. It was probably my bravest yet 🙂
just discovered this. Absolutely fascinating. Thanks for your work in preparing it. The unwanted 'music' is annoying though... have to keep turning volume up and down to get rid of it.
Thanks for watching.
The music replaces dead silence. The majority enjoy it so I stick to it
Cheers
Another great video Ant, I like the choice of incidental music, it adds to the atmosphere. I can never quite understand the thinking behind trying to fill in a tunnel, if you drop stuff down a shaft it only spreads out a few yards either side and if you come in from the portals you can't get material tight enough to the roof to support the ground above. Seems to me the only way to do it would be to dynamite the roof in and allow the land above to slump down then level it of at the top.
Yes it does seem like it's a lot of time and effort to do half a job. Especially this One that really is only half way 🤔
Thank you for watching and commenting 🙂
The metal supports and the now rotted wood are a puzzle, not aware of any brick lined tunnel with these supports, could they be formwork used in the construction that was meant to be removed but for some reason was left in place, the use of wood in a damp tunnel does suggest it was only meant to be temporary.
Thanks for watching. That is an interseting point. I've put the idea to a few people and they are really thinking about it :)
When this tunnel finally calapses itl be an eye opener
That Crap Stack is slowly starting to faulter....
Thanks for watching :)
Been trying to find them online and got pointed here anyway 🤩
What 'what three words' can I use to find this? I looked for hours the other day and came up with nothing ..there's some major landscape works happening in Gedling park right now
It looks like Detects.Cycles.Books
It's been fenced off again recently though 🙂
@@TrekkingExploration thank you!!
Me and a group of friends did this back in 1984 at the height of the miners strike!!!! With no torch all we had was my mate Jon's zippo lighter. I remember it being very wet inside. My mate Jon had done this on his own before. I think he must of had balls of steal. When we came out and went up onto the old coal wharf we saw dozens of coppers coming over the gates. We made a break for it and legged it. I was much quicker and fitter as a 15 year old back in those day's. The coppers were Thames Valley Police sent up to deal with the striking miners. Most of us got away but poor old Jon got caught arrested put in the back of a van and interrogated. These were hard police proper coppers not like the pussy cats today!!!!!! They took him home were his mother was waiting for him. She wasn't pleased to put it mildly. Next time I went to call for him I thought she was going to clobber me with a frying pan!!!! I hadn't thought about this for years until I saw this video. Fond memories the things we all did as kids!!!!
Love this wee story, aye. It reminded me of the dangerous shit I used to get myself into with my mates and then being huckled by the police. Boy did we get our arse's skelped hard from our Ma's, still good memories all the same. I still talk about this stuff with my Ma and she is like "Aye I didnae skelp ye because of what you did, I skelped ye for getting fking caught" lmao.
@@EzeePosseTV When I got home that day my mum said "were you been, you look like you've been down the pit". I said I have. I was covered in coal dust. Then I told her she might be getting a visit from the police. We never did though. She told me to go and get a bath. A couple of weeks later we were back on the coal wharf up to even more mischief. We started up a big digger and had a go in it. Problem was we couldn't switch the bloody thing off. So we left it running and legged it. We heard the police came up to turn it off. Yes indeed we were always up to something and if we got caught it was a good hiding. I wish my mum and dad were still here to chat to. Fond memories.
My dad always tells me that the Met coppers that came up for the strike didn't take any shit!
@@brickhead48 Yes indeed they were hard coppers not like the one's today that's for sure.
@@brickhead48 Look for a film called " coal not dole " ( on here ? )
Shows gedling pit and the hundreds of coppers at the miners strike.
Very good programme.
Great upload hello from Australia
Hello Australia and thank you for watching 🙂