![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiQh3eSn1Zg1Z1VGk-xn2QbDj03rxi9DSw5ri4fHfN6k-ojRdO5ctsUjsImjUN5p3-qQZnBPqUK34B_gnlG8HbIhkxSa3aAtlqEyaPFWEyD74ELixcpPQYUTRy9yXjLdZFfph0GTXH-D9nj/s400/yellow+light+kingston.jpg)
I keep stumbling across images of old
or abandoned Army posts and Navy bases.
It's a boon that Richard Nickel of Kingston Lounge
(via Rooms) has taken the time to document this,
I'm more than a little sorry to see so much of it go.
There are utterly magnificent buildings out
there, just crumbling, and it seems a shame.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhefReXi_zziKncU1I4fhubWB49IXezoa-e_UNfFLy0o4bSXnGLAJwUiQGybq-nWfbv7kZIijMjsJoKt8_tIBEAftwfagcZrEwcmB5TAFkh_NbGAXV8UrXd4f59Fov9LQmrPeK1plG0n8Vo/s400/tennis+kingston.jpg)
But it is a swell photo opportunity.
All Kingston Lounge photos, above,
are in the vicinity of NYC.
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