Yoooo guys! Good morning :D I created a discord chatroom for all of us! Come chat together! I'll be in there chatting for the next couple hours! First 50 people get a shout-out on the next video! discord.gg/GDR8NYA
Hey Steve! Great Video! That family Definitely Collected Radio/Turntables!! I am 64 and most of those were Older Than Me!! By the 60's the size of radios we're getting smaller and more portable. Thanks for what you do!
I'm 62 and in the US. I've never seen most of those types of radios. It makes me think they were in the repair business and collected as well. So... cool!!!
I am so touched by these finds. I am at home almost all the time caring for my husband with dementia, and these homes remind me that what we are inside of us, our hearts and the values and love that we leave our families and our relationship with out creator are all that really matters
Sad to see the family didn't come and get their things. I would have thought they would of bury the person with their dentures with them. Did make a Beautiful Shot for a picture. One cool radio. I've never seen one so big. I wonder if it had some loudspeakers to blast the music. Times has changed. This Man must repair them or like You said He collected them. I have never seen so many antique radios. They must of really Love Music. They so much respect over there. You know here in America this place would of been clean out things taken to Goodwill and the House sold. What a real Gem this place was.
@@sheiladawg1664 seems to me the younger generations have missed some inner rules of respect and that is something aging reflections can teach them as they wander through life. Not a breath not heard felt or not known by our Creator.
So many special pictures left behind for no-one to save and pass on. That really bothers me. Beautiful radios just being destroyed laying there. Thank you for the great explore !
I think you are right. I'm in my fifties and the pics look like my grandparents and parents pictures same eras. I wonder why their kids didn't take the stuff left behind.
That is my thoughts too. Think these people were married in late 40's early 50's seeing their wedding pictures, their kids and then their grandkids. They loved to entertain it seems with that big table and all the glasses.
TY for sharing this incredible find! I was a teenager in early 80's and at that time (in Canada anyway) a lot of repair shops closed & became basement/garage based home businesses. Replacing became cheaper than repairing (excepting antiques) wiping out their livelihoods. Just my sense of what may have happened here.
Wow, what a find!! Brilliant :) First of all, LOL at the dentures on the fireplace :) That Barco radio is Belgian. In fact, Barco was established in Poperinge, Belgium. I saw the name of that town somewhere in your video as well, so I assume that's where you were. So it literally was a radio from that very town. The Grundig radio at 06:30. Wow!! My parents had one exactly like that! It sure brings back memories. But theirs was in some kind of desk cupboard, with storage at the bottom. And on the left side there was a built in record player as well. Those Sapoli tins, I believe they are a stain and scratch remover for wooden furniture. Which makes total sense with all those radios encased in wood.
Steve, It is quite possible that the man of the house repaired radios and turntables. I would have liked to see the kitchen in detail. I also believe that an older couple lived there, then the photos in black and white are their children and then the newer ones of the babies (twins) are their grandchildren. The wedding couple is the parents of the twins.
What a haunting, beautiful place with all those radios. I always wonder what happened to the people. Seems some sudden event whisked them away. Creepy. Great job.
You're supposed to have a knowledge of the past, but these kids spend all of their time on worthless crap and gaming all day...You can tell by his lack of knowledge about things that a guy his age should already know at least the basics of.
My father was an appliance repair man in the 50s through the 70s and our home always had radios and tvs and few things that I don't even know what they were. Our home looked just like that. Made us all nuts because nothing ever worked the old things were for parts.
Probly 50 decades of 📻 in there the newer black and silver one is from 90s maybe very late 80s. I had one like it or the American version of it! I love how spray paint doesnt cover everything over there!
Loved this. As a collector of all things eclectic and vintage I see $$ signs. So many beautiful pieces screaming to be loved and restored. Steve these abandoned mansions are a collectors dream ❤️
Another fantastic place. Can;t wait to see it. that shot you just took was wonderful. Beautiful. OOOh a 6 band radio there. I have never seen a radio like that either. It is really big.Seems like they could really have a party with some loud music on that one. Maybe they fixed them up and sold them. Beautiful house though, enjoyed this one a lot. thank you again for another great one.
I think a lot of the old homes you find are actually parents that lived there raised their children and then their children marry and give them grandchildren. Thats why the newer photos....maybe the older owner of the home had a repair shop and fixed radios and phonographs for a living...another interresting find,thanks..dee
Amazing video....I have 2 of the radios that were in this video. Both were given to my Mom by her grandmother when we lived in Germany many years ago. So crazy to see them.
The radio age runs from the 1930-65 era. The wood shelving units are something folks who has a bit of money had built, or special order bought. I guess the photos range from the 1930’s through maybe 1980’s.
What a beautiful home. Sad to see it in such disrepair. The big radio in the dinning room reminded me of my parents highboy radio. It was made to be a piece of furniture It had cabinet doors on the sides where you could store booze and glasses.m I can remember how it smelled when you turned it on because it had a tube that burned.
The painting in the dining room made me laugh because millions of families in England. Had this picture in there home in the 80s. My in laws had one lol, This is a amazing house but sad at the same time. Great video once again. 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
These people lived in the 1950 to 70's judging by the decor in the place. in the 1960 is when black and white photos were more prevalent. that is also when the colour photos were being introduced.
The man must have been a radio repairman & loved to collect them as well... Radios were a big deal back in the day... Up until around the 80's there wasn't really nothing on TV much less many channels to choose from... They had radio programs that was like how audio books are today that would be on live radio... They would even have soap opera series that would come on certain times a day to tune into... Families or couples would set around listening to the radio's... It is a crying shame all them pics were left behind... It's so sad that family don't care about their loved ones enough to cherish what they left behind... There is so much money in this home that's just gunna rot :(
So very sad that the dreams of their lives are all gone. I really enjoy looking at the multi generation photos! I'm sure there are several items that are worth nothing except to those who loved them. Thank you for sharing!
Beautiful Radios 📻, Maybe the owner was a Radio 📻 collector. Sad 😞 that they left a lot of pictures. Awesome 👏 Video!. Love ❤️ it !.. Doing a Great 👍🏼 Job .
Dude, I've been into Urban Ex since before UA-cam or Google. You have THE BEST locations! How do you do it? And your photography is awesome. Thanks for what you do. I love it.
The big old radio you saw is the Konzertmeister RP70 that was made around 1965-1966. Actually, it is not one piece. I think I could distinguish at least 3 radios and turntables stacked on top of each other. The Saba radio in the storage room is even older, came out around 1955. They both use vacuum tubes for transistors. The Grundig is the most recent radio model. I think it is in the early to mid-80s model. Oh by the way, the record player you saw was called turntables during those years.
Good morning, happy to catch this one early.. I'm so not a morning person but I'm up watch your video. Have a wonderful day ya all!! Much love & always be safe!
Here in philipines we call that stereo"radyo pono" and the tape that looks like cd but its bigger we call it" longplay plaka"my mother in law has this kind of tape
The radios used to be the only way to receive information, during war time. I wish we knew who the owners were and maybe donate the radios to the Museum of technology or war time memorabilia. Some of those radios date back to the 1930's and 40's. it is a shame to leave them there to rot and fall apart like that
This radio house is Italian immigrants from 1952 or so. They are Catholic. Maybe related to Marconi who was the Italian man who invented radio or may just be collectors. The radio back in the day was a real furniture item and would be the centrepoiny of the loungeroom for the family. Where there are 3 radios stacked on one Another, the bottom one was AM only the one above was FM only but also had a tape deck. Where you saw the small one in the corner near a chair is where the man in the house would traditionally sit after dinner to smoke a pipe and listen to the news and then radio plays. The room above showed it was probably a teenage girls room from the 1980's given the pop stars all had mullet hair styles.
I'm sure the radios were they're entertainment. That's what they used before TV . I'm sure this was a grandparents home. The new pictures must have been their great grandchildren 😍
Wow .. I'm just thinking how it would have been living in 70s and 80s.. Music must have been so precious those days, it's so sad they just left those wonderful radios there to die. Hope someone finds and save them
The radios could also have been her husband's means of supporting his family as a repairman and or a salesman of them. Before tv radio was people's entertainment for radio shows and music
They look like world radios. They may be still out there. I knew some people growing up who had them. Fun...could listen to radio stations all over the world.
I had a couple am shortwave radios.. from 1940..they were 4 foot high.. I believe philco made them and they all worked had a big speaker in the front then you would pull down the front and it would have a turntable that played 33/ and a third albums.. I gave them all away when i moved I guess you could use them for decoration in maybe a pool table room to me they were worthless that's why I gave them away... the tubes in the back are hard to find they're probably worth more than the radio.. he could have got them out of the trash and he liked repairing them or he had a small business on the side back in the day you could buy them for $15 brand new..$20 Bucks..Today they would go for maybe $200 dollars....!!
Yoooo guys! Good morning :D I created a discord chatroom for all of us! Come chat together! I'll be in there chatting for the next couple hours! First 50 people get a shout-out on the next video! discord.gg/GDR8NYA
It took my phone so long to download discord so I guess I missed out 😮😮
Jenny&Brett nope not a lot of people! You still have a chance
It's okay! I'll be doing more shout outs! :)
It was awesome chatting with you today Steve!
My pleasure :)
Hey Steve! Great Video! That family Definitely Collected Radio/Turntables!! I am 64 and most of those were Older Than Me!! By the 60's the size of radios we're getting smaller and more portable. Thanks for what you do!
I'm 62 and in the US. I've never seen most of those types of radios. It makes me think they were in the repair business and collected as well. So... cool!!!
Pictures left behind always make me sad
Not me. I just smash them, knowing it will hurt you.
I am so touched by these finds. I am at home almost all the time caring for my husband with dementia, and these homes remind me that what we are inside of us, our hearts and the values and love that we leave our families and our relationship with out creator are all that really matters
I hope you're doing okay. Dementia and Alzheimer's are not easy.
They may have been in the repair business. Some of those radios are worth a mint!
That was my thought. The stuff in the attic looks to be for treating wood. And there was lots of it so I'd say you are right!
Sad to see the family didn't come and get their things. I would have thought they would of bury the person with their dentures with them. Did make a Beautiful Shot for a picture. One cool radio. I've never seen one so big. I wonder if it had some loudspeakers to blast the music. Times has changed. This Man must repair them or like You said He collected them. I have never seen so many antique radios. They must of really Love Music. They so much respect over there. You know here in America this place would of been clean out things taken to Goodwill and the House sold. What a real Gem this place was.
I really like your respectful approach, the back ground music and your appreciation of the lives that once was there.
I've said the same thing. These guys are the best. Sad you have the few idiots out there
Too bad they're not respectful enough to leave things they touch as they were before touching them.
Cringe every time he did it.
@@sheiladawg1664 seems to me the younger generations have missed some inner rules of respect and that is something aging reflections can teach them as they wander through life. Not a breath not heard felt or not known by our Creator.
So many special pictures left behind for no-one to save and pass on. That really bothers me. Beautiful radios just being destroyed laying there. Thank you for the great explore !
Yes Steve, times have changed. I'm 61, my parents had a console stereo & a color tv.
That place is in sad sad shape. Very unusual place. Great find. Too bad all those radios will be ruined.
Think the house belonged to grandparents and the newer photos were of their grandchildren.
Carolyn S ... my thoughts exactly!!
👍
But why no one came and took the the stuff and pictures
I think you are right. I'm in my fifties and the pics look like my grandparents and parents pictures same eras. I wonder why their kids didn't take the stuff left behind.
That is my thoughts too. Think these people were married in late 40's early 50's seeing their wedding pictures, their kids and then their grandkids. They loved to entertain it seems with that big table and all the glasses.
TY for sharing this incredible find! I was a teenager in early 80's and at that time (in Canada anyway) a lot of repair shops closed & became basement/garage based home businesses. Replacing became cheaper than repairing (excepting antiques) wiping out their livelihoods. Just my sense of what may have happened here.
Wow, what a find!! Brilliant :)
First of all, LOL at the dentures on the fireplace :)
That Barco radio is Belgian. In fact, Barco was established in Poperinge, Belgium. I saw the name of that town somewhere in your video as well, so I assume that's where you were. So it literally was a radio from that very town.
The Grundig radio at 06:30. Wow!! My parents had one exactly like that! It sure brings back memories. But theirs was in some kind of desk cupboard, with storage at the bottom. And on the left side there was a built in record player as well.
Those Sapoli tins, I believe they are a stain and scratch remover for wooden furniture. Which makes total sense with all those radios encased in wood.
One happy day they got married, lived a happy life, loved music and collected radios then the next day they were gone and you are there
Why cant the city come and get those radio and put them in a historical museum .wow great job guys.thanks for sharing.
Steve, It is quite possible that the man of the house repaired radios and turntables. I would have liked to see the kitchen in detail. I also believe that an older couple lived there, then the photos in black and white are their children and then the newer ones of the babies (twins) are their grandchildren. The wedding couple is the parents of the twins.
You did a wonderful job of showing this house and the contents. You are getting better and better at doing this. I enjoyed it. Thank you!
Did you see the dentures on the fireplace
That's the 1st thing I saw! Lol
I was wondering why nobody was talking about them!
A lot of the antiques there belong in a museum, dedicated to that family ❤️
Great video bro! 🔥 Loved exploring this place together with you! 🙏🏼💯
Awesome to see some fellow Dutch urbexers!
What a haunting, beautiful place with all those radios. I always wonder what happened to the people. Seems some sudden event whisked them away. Creepy. Great job.
Nice to see such a young man appreciate the older things in history of the family. Thank you for sharing 😊
You're supposed to have a knowledge of the past, but these kids spend all of their time on worthless crap and gaming all day...You can tell by his lack of knowledge about things that a guy his age should already know at least the basics of.
Very nice find man! 👏🏼👍🏼
It would be nice to learn about the family and what happened.
Unfortunately I couldn't find that out :(
Maybe the ancestors owned a lot of radios or they have a radio Factory or something. Or a collection. Beautiful . Thank you !
My father was an appliance repair man in the 50s through the 70s and our home always had radios and tvs and few things that I don't even know what they were. Our home looked just like that. Made us all nuts because nothing ever worked the old things were for parts.
Absolutely fascinating ! Thanks for being so respectful of this beautiful house. I collect old radios so this is very interesting to me x
Probly 50 decades of 📻 in there the newer black and silver one is from 90s maybe very late 80s. I had one like it or the American version of it! I love how spray paint doesnt cover everything over there!
Those photos would be priceless to the family. Maybe a collector or repairman of radios. Very good explore but kinda sad too. Thank you Steve
Loved this. As a collector of all things eclectic and vintage I see $$ signs. So many beautiful pieces screaming to be loved and restored. Steve these abandoned mansions are a collectors dream ❤️
Another fantastic place. Can;t wait to see it. that shot you just took was wonderful. Beautiful. OOOh a 6 band radio there. I have never seen a radio like that either. It is really big.Seems like they could really have a party with some loud music on that one. Maybe they fixed them up and sold them. Beautiful house though, enjoyed this one a lot. thank you again for another great one.
I think a lot of the old homes you find are actually parents that lived there raised their children and then their children marry and give them grandchildren. Thats why the newer photos....maybe the older owner of the home had a repair shop and fixed radios and phonographs for a living...another interresting find,thanks..dee
Amazing video....I have 2 of the radios that were in this video. Both were given to my Mom by her grandmother when we lived in Germany many years ago. So crazy to see them.
Very unique place. Sometimes the large radios are a combo of radio and record player. One on each side. Great find Steve!
Great video Steve loving your videos ☺
Awesome place and video! Love those old radio's
The radio age runs from the 1930-65 era. The wood shelving units are something folks who has a bit of money had built, or special order bought. I guess the photos range from the 1930’s through maybe 1980’s.
As always, frame 4:28 is another awesome photo. Beautiful, haunting and sad, nice color mixture.
Yeah sad that so many beautiful photos of relatives did not get collected
What a beautiful home. Sad to see it in such disrepair. The big radio in the dinning room reminded me of my parents highboy radio. It was made to be a piece of furniture It had cabinet doors on the sides where you could store booze and glasses.m I can remember how it smelled when you turned it on because it had a tube that burned.
Steve another amazing video!!! I really enjoyed this place👍🏻💕💜💕
Great find! Cool to see the old radios and stuff. Keep up the good work!
Your videos and photos are awesome! Good work
Very cool find Steve, I was thinking Maybe who ever lived there like to fix Radios. Oh knowa some of them might be worth money?
The painting in the dining room made me laugh because millions of families in England. Had this picture in there home in the 80s. My in laws had one lol, This is a amazing house but sad at the same time. Great video once again. 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
I'm quietly watching your videos one by one. 😊
I am so amazed at every place and abandoned house you go to. Just wow!
Stay safe guys. 🥰
From the 🇵🇭
I never seen a giant radio like that. Very amazing place thank you. I can't wait till Japan.
These people lived in the 1950 to 70's judging by the decor in the place. in the 1960 is when black and white photos were more prevalent. that is also when the colour photos were being introduced.
I agree
Europe explores were fantastic!! I cant wait to see Japan!
The man must have been a radio repairman & loved to collect them as well... Radios were a big deal back in the day... Up until around the 80's there wasn't really nothing on TV much less many channels to choose from... They had radio programs that was like how audio books are today that would be on live radio... They would even have soap opera series that would come on certain times a day to tune into... Families or couples would set around listening to the radio's... It is a crying shame all them pics were left behind... It's so sad that family don't care about their loved ones enough to cherish what they left behind... There is so much money in this home that's just gunna rot :(
Beautiful! Sapoli is supposed removes stain from wood. Googled it.
This one is my favorite. Cause I love vintage radios! You guys are the best!
So very sad that the dreams of their lives are all gone. I really enjoy looking at the multi generation photos! I'm sure there are several items that are worth nothing except to those who loved them. Thank you for sharing!
Interesting find. Radios wow some are worth a lot of money ;)
This place was the best kept antique collection in one house.Great video☮😊
Love the place. I also will visit that location to. 🙂 Love you're videos.
❤️
Thank you so much! Oouuu enjoy when you go ;)
At 6:15, that's some extraordinary advanced radio!
If I had to guess, the newer photos are grandkids, and the older ones are of the couple and their families.
This one made me cry. Not sure must be all the radios. Both my parents were in bands. Always radio playing.
Beautiful Radios 📻, Maybe the owner was a Radio 📻 collector. Sad 😞 that they left a lot of pictures. Awesome 👏 Video!. Love ❤️ it !.. Doing a Great 👍🏼 Job .
Wow! Awesome find bro! Your work is fantastic! Wish I could explore personally with you!
Steve imagine a midle aged couple, with photos of their child, and also their grandsons, and from their own parents. I think this is it.
Beautifully shot video 👍🏻🍻
So much stuff, it must be hard to leave such an amazing place 💜💜
Crazy location
.👌🏻well done @steve
The giant radio at 6:00 is actually 3 separate radio consoles stacked together.
wow very nice video thanks for it 👍👍👍✌️
Those radios are collector items on eBay!
Dude, I've been into Urban Ex since before UA-cam or Google. You have THE BEST locations! How do you do it? And your photography is awesome. Thanks for what you do. I love it.
I loved this video. Must have been a collector repairman. Too bad, some of those radios are worth big bucks.
A radio collector would love to take those over. "Great video".
I collect vintage & modern radios. I would love to take the smaller radios. 💖😀🎶 Great house & video Steve. 💖
It looks like Iike things where taken, the shelf with all the dust, looks like maybe it had wine bottles...
Cool gem of an exploration. Thank you. Shout out to Explomo. Ronin Army.
The big old radio you saw is the Konzertmeister RP70 that was made around 1965-1966. Actually, it is not one piece. I think I could distinguish at least 3 radios and turntables stacked on top of each other. The Saba radio in the storage room is even older, came out around 1955. They both use vacuum tubes for transistors. The Grundig is the most recent radio model. I think it is in the early to mid-80s model. Oh by the way, the record player you saw was called turntables during those years.
LOVE the intro, your video aesthetic, editing and content are amaze 💕
Good morning, happy to catch this one early.. I'm so not a morning person but I'm up watch your video. Have a wonderful day ya all!! Much love & always be safe!
Here in philipines we call that stereo"radyo pono" and the tape that looks like cd but its bigger we call it" longplay plaka"my mother in law has this kind of tape
The radios used to be the only way to receive information, during war time. I wish we knew who the owners were and maybe donate the radios to the Museum of technology or war time memorabilia. Some of those radios date back to the 1930's and 40's. it is a shame to leave them there to rot and fall apart like that
Those radios reminds me of my grandparents back in a day. They used batteries to make it work. Because there was no electricity back then.
This radio house is Italian immigrants from 1952 or so. They are Catholic. Maybe related to Marconi who was the Italian man who invented radio or may just be collectors. The radio back in the day was a real furniture item and would be the centrepoiny of the loungeroom for the family. Where there are 3 radios stacked on one Another, the bottom one was AM only the one above was FM only but also had a tape deck. Where you saw the small one in the corner near a chair is where the man in the house would traditionally sit after dinner to smoke a pipe and listen to the news and then radio plays.
The room above showed it was probably a teenage girls room from the 1980's given the pop stars all had mullet hair styles.
Love the photos you take wish i could afford some. So plz keep up the good work and be safe xx
Hey Steve! That was so neat! Thank you so much! It was so awesome!
Awesome Steve
Epic
The newspaper you found is Dutch
I'm sure the radios were they're entertainment. That's what they used before TV . I'm sure this was a grandparents home. The new pictures must have been their great grandchildren 😍
Bonito VUESTRO TRABAJO !!!!!!!
Wow .. I'm just thinking how it would have been living in 70s and 80s.. Music must have been so precious those days, it's so sad they just left those wonderful radios there to die. Hope someone finds and save them
Would have loved to see the outside, too.
Good Morning Steve. Happy Monday. :)
7.32 painting is by Constable
"All we hear is radio gah gah...."🎵📻🎶
Thank you for sharing your adventure. I love your perspective. Beautiful.
youre welcome :D stay tune for more!
Looks like he collected radios. Beautiful Home, can just imagine the memories there! I believe the Celebirty's of today Don't have Class,
The radios could also have been her husband's means of supporting his family as a repairman and or a salesman of them. Before tv radio was people's entertainment for radio shows and music
Me super encanta, de paso ver los tipos de tocadiscos q existen en ésos tiempos. Se ve muy antigua, ése tapizado en paredes muy bello.
They look like world radios. They may be still out there. I knew some people growing up who had them. Fun...could listen to radio stations all over the world.
great video again Steve!
Very interesting, thank you.
I had a couple am shortwave radios.. from 1940..they were 4 foot high.. I believe philco made them and they all worked had a big speaker in the front then you would pull down the front and it would have a turntable that played 33/ and a third albums.. I gave them all away when i moved I guess you could use them for decoration in maybe a pool table room to me they were worthless that's why I gave them away... the tubes in the back are hard to find they're probably worth more than the radio.. he could have got them out of the trash and he liked repairing them or he had a small business on the side back in the day you could buy them for $15 brand new..$20 Bucks..Today they would go for maybe $200 dollars....!!
Love your content