New Urbex Videos Dropped
ObsidianUrbex posted a new video of an abandoned Irish mansion 'forgotten for decades' (the clip drew engagement — 94 likes and 6,413 views on the post) and another explore of a North Wales underground military museum. ( ) A separate 'sad house' urbex with intact family photos surfaced, the sort of find that photographers prize for narrative and atmosphere. (x.com)
Obsidian Urbex’s newest upload on YouTube is a short titled “Exploring an abandoned military museum hidden in an underground cavern,” which identifies the site as the Grange Cavern Military Museum near Holywell in North Wales. (youtube.com) The creator also published an Ireland-focused field report called “Ireland 2025” on their site, which documents visits to multiple derelict houses and at least one large mansion said to date to the 1700s. (obsidianurbexphotography.com) The Obsidian Urbex project is run by photographer Janine Pendleton, who operates a dedicated website and a Patreon page for supporters and prints. (obsidianurbexphotography.com) Grange Cavern’s background is well-documented by local urbex researchers: the caverns were quarried in the 19th century, later used for wartime munitions storage, and were converted into an underground military museum whose closure left artefacts scattered across the site. (gronkue.com) The separate “sad house” post (milonlolita’s status) could not be loaded from the provided X link during searches and had no accessible public archive discovered; the search did, however, turn up multiple urbex shorts showing intact family photo collections in abandoned homes as comparable examples. (x.com) Summary: Obsidian Urbex’s recent public output includes a Grange Cavern military-museum explore on YouTube and an Ireland 2025 blog documenting a long-abandoned mansion, while the specific X-status media for the “sad house” post was not retrievable from public indexing during this search. (youtube.com)