An abandoned 19th-century farmhouse in New York has remained untouched for 4 decades — take a look inside
Photographer Bryan Sansivero was commissioned to photograph an abandoned farmhouse on Long Island.
It was built in the 1860s and was abandoned a century later — it hasn't been touched for 40 years.
The time-capsule home still has clothing, bottles, and photographs that its owners left behind.
Photographer Bryan Sansivero was commissioned to photograph a house in Commack, New York, that's been abandoned for at least 40 years — and he found a home frozen in time.
Sansivero told Insider there had been a legal battle between the previous owners and the local school district, which was bequeathed the home.
"Once that lawsuit was settled, the district had me come in to photograph everything in the house as it was," Sansivero said.
Keep scrolling to learn more about the house.
The farmhouse in Commack, New York, was built in 1860 and has been abandoned for 40 years.
Once you walk into the home, you can see that the house retains much of its original look.
This gilded mirror's elaborate frame has held up over the last four decades, too.
When looking at the dusty bottles left behind, it's almost like you've traveled back in time.
"I've always been drawn to the unknown. I'm a very curious person and I just have always found abandoned buildings intriguing," Sansivero told Insider.
"I studied filmmaking and did a documentary on an abandoned psychiatric hospital. I realized there was so much more out there than just that place," he said.
This is Sansivero's favorite photo of the house. "I think it gives a good overall feeling that the house had," he said.
Whoever lived here left some of their photos behind. People usually feel "bewilderment over how things can be left behind in places" after looking at Sansivero's work, he said.
Sansivero shared with Insider some of the information he learned about the house's history.
"It was an old farmstead built in 1860," he said. "An elderly woman who was loved by her community lived there alone until she passed, I believe, in the 1960s."
But he said there's more to the story. "I could write a small book" on the house, he added.
His advice for aspiring photographers: "Don't be afraid of making art." He added, "Art can come from the strangest places so, whatever you're feeling, just follow that and I think amazing things will happen."
Sansivero regularly shares photos of his work on Instagram.
He also published a book, aptly titled "American Decay." As the title suggests, it is filled with homes like this one, left untouched for decades — just waiting for someone to come along and rediscover them.
Read the original article on Insider