Skip to content

Abandoned Hotel Front Facade Eerie Beauty | Limited Edition of 10

Sale price $79.00 CAD

Select Dimensions

Urban Decay Photo of Forgotten Grand Entrance

I’ve always been drawn to facades—not because they hide things, but because they reveal them. The front of this abandoned hotel said more than any guidebook could. Everything about it was layered with memory: flaking plaster, boarded windows, empty sockets where lamps once lit the night. It wasn’t just a building—it was a former invitation, now sealed off with rot and silence.

I found this place on foot, wandering a side street in a small Croatian where the edges of grandeur were giving way to erosion. It might’ve been a hotel, maybe a private mansion long ago. Either way, it once mattered. The kind of building someone took pride in designing—the scrollwork above the door, the symmetry in the window placement, the balcony carved with care.

Now it’s all barely holding on. The doorway’s been barricaded, windows broken or boarded in haste, and graffiti creeping in like vines. And yet, there’s beauty in that tension—the way elegance crumbles, but refuses to vanish. It’s one of those scenes I kept circling, camera in hand, trying to absorb everything without disturbing anything. A kind of reverence for the ruin.

There’s no need to romanticize it. The structure is tired. But tired in the way old hands are—worn, not weak. You can still see the life that passed through here. Maybe it hosted weddings, or dinners, or solitary travellers leaning on a balustrade at dusk. Whatever it was, this façade is the only part still trying to tell the story.

I printed this piece because it carries weight. It’s not loud or flashy—but it lingers. You start noticing the asymmetry, the graffiti layered over ancient stone, the slightly crooked balcony railings. Every crack and texture invites closer inspection. That’s what I chase with this kind of work—not perfection, but presence.

If this speaks to you, there’s more in the Abandoned Photography Collection, where forgotten buildings still hold their character. Or explore the Urban Decay Photography Collection if you’re drawn to architecture in collapse, where cities let their ghosts show.

© Dan Kosmayer, 2020 

Edition Information

This photograph is released as a signed and numbered edition of 10 prints across all available sizes. Each print is individually signed and numbered by the artist on the reverse and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity.

Once all 10 prints have been sold, this work will be permanently retired, and no further numbered editions will be produced in any size or format. A small number of Artist Proofs may be retained by the artist for archival or exhibition purposes.

Museum Quality Fine Art Prints

All prints are produced by the artist using archival pigment inks on professional photographic paper with a subtle luster finish.

This paper offers a balanced surface that enhances tonal depth, preserves fine detail, and reduces glare under typical indoor lighting conditions.

Each print is carefully inspected prior to dispatch to ensure consistency of finish and presentation.

Free Worldwide Delivery

Each print is personally produced, signed, and packaged by me at my studio in Haliburton, Ontario, Canada.

Orders are shipped worldwide via Canada Post at no additional cost. Delivery times may vary based on destination and local customs processing.

During periods of travel for on-location photographic work, dispatch may be delayed until I return to the studio.

Back to top