This didn’t end well

060914

There’d been a fire at this house; we could tell that much. Judging from the chunks of previously-molten glass and the one piece of aluminum that had melted into a silvery pancake, it was a hot fire. (Aluminum melts at 1,221 degrees, I found out later). Almost nothing remained to give us any clues about what rooms had been where (a pile of broken china might have shown us where the dining room was, but who could tell?) or how big or how old the place might have been.

It’s in a remote part of a remote county, and internet searches didn’t reveal anything about when it happened, or why, or to whom.

We hope everyone made it out.

Cochran County, Texas
photographed 5.24.2014

(This is the third photo from the Day of Driving and Photographing. You can see the first one here and the second one here.)

Posted on June 9, 2014, in Photography and tagged , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. 10 Comments.

  1. Very dramatic elements… both sky and brick, not to mention the story.

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  2. Almost sculptural. I like the toning, Melinda

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  3. Nice shot. Was the perimeter of the house marked out?

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    • Thanks. The outline of the house wasn’t as defined as we thought it would have been. Around here, a lot of houses are built with concrete slabs but this house was build with wooden pier-on-beam construction (we surmise, because there wasn’t a slab). The entire floor had burned away but we were able to trace the general outline of the house because the heating/cooling system had used underfloor ducts and the vents from those were visible. In addition to the lumps of melted glass and aluminum, we found one spur.

      It was eerie, and I think all four of us felt unnerved seeing the destruction that the fire left behind.

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