Abandoned Buildings That Started Looking Alive (12 Photos)
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Abandoned places already carry a lot of atmosphere. In the right hands, a ruin becomes more than a backdrop. Windows turn into eyes.
Doorways become mouths. Empty rooms can feel haunted, hungry, watchful, or strangely human. These 12 works use decay, light, and architecture to make forgotten buildings feel as if they have just woken up.
More: 17 Times Nikita Nomerz Brought Walls to Life

👁️ The Haunted Chapel — By Nikita Nomerz
Some ruins already look like they are trying to speak. This piece fits Nikita Nomerz’s long-running Living Walls project, where abandoned structures become expressive faces by using windows, cracks, and doorways as features. Here, the chapel’s upper openings become watchful eyes, while the doorway becomes a mouth full of teeth. The result feels part cartoon, part urban folklore.
💡 Nerd Fact: In a 2025 interview with Purple Haze, Nomerz said he does not see himself as a city invader, but as someone filling “urban voids.” That idea fits this chapel: it feels less like a wall someone painted and more like a forgotten shell that has found a voice.
More: 17 Times Nikita Nomerz Brought Walls to Life
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💀 Window Skull — By Achilles in Athens, Greece 🇬🇷
This piece works because the building was already halfway there. In the linked Instagram post from his Athens abandoned-building series, Achilles lets two arched windows become eye sockets and the doorway become a nose. The whole room suddenly seems to stare back. Simple, eerie, and effective.
💡 Nerd Fact: Achilles has said he is deeply interested in skulls. In The Crowded Planet’s Athens street art feature, he explained that skull imagery helps him explore what is beneath the skin before painting a face. That makes this abandoned-room piece feel like both a portrait and an X-ray.
More: 4 Street Artworks by Achilles in Athens, Greece
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🚪 The Prisoner — By Nikita Nomerz
Instead of turning the whole facade into a face, Nikita Nomerz turns it into a trapped body. The vertical openings read as bars. Giant painted hands grip the brick itself. It fits the darker side of his Living Walls, where abandoned architecture can feel like a figure trying to break free from its own frame.
💡 Nerd Fact: In that same Purple Haze interview, Nomerz says location choice often depends on a place’s history, architecture, and original function. That is a useful key to this one: it feels less like a figure pasted onto brick and more like a story pulled out of the building itself.
More: 17 Times Nikita Nomerz Brought Walls to Life

🏙️ Greenpoint Skull — By Suitswon in Brooklyn, New York, USA 🇺🇸
Suitswon’s ruined waterfront skull is known as Greenpoint Skull. In UP Magazine’s interview, he explains that he spotted the building while walking his dog in 2017, realized it only needed a jaw and a nose, and went back after 1 a.m. to paint it. That backstory makes the piece even better: the ruin really did seem to be waiting for someone to notice its shape.
💡 Nerd Fact: In UP Magazine’s interview, Suitswon says he used scrap planks from the yard to reach the wall and painted for about four hours. He also said the piece was not about pushing a crew name. He wanted to make something people outside graffiti would notice.
More: Street Art by Suitswon – In Brooklyn, New York, USA
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🦁 Roaring Lion — By SCAF in Boulogne-sur-Mer, France 🇫🇷
SCAF does not just paint a lion here; he releases one into the ruin. A Street Art Cities entry for the lion places it in Boulogne-sur-Mer and includes SCAF’s explanation that he wanted children to marvel at it and invent their own story. He also says he spent time on the lion’s hair so it would feel almost touchable. That mix of fantasy and craft is why the old space feels suddenly occupied.
💡 Nerd Fact: On the Street Art Cities page for this lion, SCAF says the common thread in his work is keeping a childlike spirit for as long as possible. That makes the lion feel more like a giant story prompt than a single mural.
More: By SCAF – Lion in an Abandoned Building
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🛏️ HOME — By La rouille
This one is much quieter than the monster illusions, and that makes it hit harder. On his website, La rouille describes a practice shaped by urban exploration and by the damage left by history, time, and memory. That context makes the stained room, abandoned mattress, and fragile portrait feel less staged and more remembered. It is one of the clearest examples here of making a ruin feel inhabited without raising the volume.
💡 Nerd Fact: La rouille’s official bio says he discovered painting late during urban explorations and became interested in damage left by history and time, both material and memorial. That is why his portraits often feel less painted onto ruins than pulled out of them.
More: HOME
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🌇 Sunset Face — By Achilles in Athens, Greece 🇬🇷
Achilles has a gift for letting architecture do half the work. In the linked Athens abandoned-building post, the twin windows become glowing eyes and the broken wall becomes a face looking out over the city. The sunset does the rest, turning the ruin into a portrait that feels less painted than discovered.
💡 Nerd Fact: Achilles is not only an abandoned-building specialist. As I Support Street Art notes, his wider practice spans street art, graffiti, painting, murals, portraits, and illustration. That makes these ruin works feel like one branch of a much larger visual language, not random urbex detours.
More: 4 Street Artworks by Achilles in Athens, Greece
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🦖 Fossil Beast — By SCAF in Lorraine, France 🇫🇷
A dinosaur skeleton already brings drama, but SCAF pushes it further by turning the ruined wall into a snapping jaw. On Instagram, he captioned the work “Gooood Boy,” which gives the monster a strange comic twist. The scale, teeth, and 3D perspective make the abandoned site feel like a prehistoric trap.
💡 Nerd Fact: SCAF is Pierre Bertolotti, and his artist bio on Street-Artwork says the name “SCAF” comes from the acronym “Super Conneries À Faire.” His background in B-boy characters, cartoon art, and perspective-driven illusion helps explain why even his monster pieces keep a comic-book attitude.
More: By SCAF – In Lorraine, France
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🌿 Ivy Ghost — By La rouille
La rouille is very good at making a wall feel inhabited without overexplaining it. As Urban Nation notes, his dissolving portraits are inspired by forgotten urban landscapes and decayed buildings. That is why the damp stains and climbing ivy feel like part of the figure, not decoration around it.
💡 Nerd Fact: In an interview with Alter1fo, La rouille said his name partly comes from a fascination with rust itself: its texture, its color, and its sense of time. He also said the mood and history of a place are essential when he chooses where to paint, which is exactly why his figures seem fused to their walls.
More: Street Art by La rouille in an Abandoned Building
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🌬️ “Please Stand Here” — By Dennis Fauter in Lagos, Portugal 🇵🇹
Dennis Fauter paints a huge profile that rises out of a broken room. The missing roof and open sky are what make it work. Barbara Picci’s documentation lists the Portugal mural as a 2023 work and credits the photo to Dennis Fauter. That context suits the piece: instead of feeling trapped inside the ruin, the portrait seems to breathe through it.
💡 Nerd Fact: On the official Def Notes bio page, his artistic path is described as beginning in graffiti in 2011, after years of drawing and canvas work inspired by manga and comics. The bio also describes his murals as site-specific and art as a medium of communication. That helps explain why this profile seems to converse with the ruin instead of just decorating it.
More: 5 Photos of Street Art by Dennis Fauter
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🎩 “The Mask” — By DavidL in Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
DavidL brings full cartoon-nightmare energy into an empty house. He shared the piece on Instagram as “THE MASK, 2021”, and the title fits. The giant grin, tilted hat, and broken staircase make it feel as if the building has grown a wild personality. It is loud, mischievous, and a little dangerous.
💡 Nerd Fact: Brooklyn Street Art described DavidL as “almost a hermit” when painting walls and noted that he builds a personal universe in a secret abandoned location. That backstory makes pieces like this feel less like random pop-culture jokes and more like chapters from one hidden world.
More: THE MASK by DavidL in Barcelona, Spain
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✂️ Edward Scissorhands — By DavidL in Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
This one feels strangely tender for a ruined house. DavidL shared it as “Edward Scissorhands 2017…”, and the long scissor hand stretches across the damaged blue room like a memory refusing to leave. The peeling walls do as much emotional work as the character. It does not just look like a mural in an abandoned building; it looks like the building remembers him.
💡 Nerd Fact: The same Brooklyn Street Art feature documented DavidL making one abandoned-room piece during a seven-hour session while listening to hip hop, and noted that he keeps the original sketches. That studio-like process helps explain why these ruin paintings feel so composed.
More: Edward Scissorhands by DavidL in Barcelona, Spain
🔗 Follow DavidL on Instagram
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#5 New Street Art (10 Photos)
This batch moves from loud protest to quiet human connection. It brings together cosmic myths, glowing…
@streetartutopia reminds me at this house in Portugal.
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@dk3jf @streetartutopia@streetartutopia.com Agree! 😎
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