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Antique Bank Vault Door McKeesport Black And White | Limited Edition of 10

Sale price $79.00 CAD

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Mechanical Steel Locking Wheels Inside Forgotten Pennsylvania Bank

There is something strangely compelling about old industrial machinery when it was built to last forever. Standing in front of this antique bank vault inside the abandoned People’s Bank building in McKeesport, Pennsylvania, I kept coming back to the sheer physical presence of the door itself. Heavy steel. Thick locking bars. Massive wheel handles worn smooth from decades of use. Even sitting silent and unused, it still felt imposing.

What interested me most was the geometry of the mechanism. The large central wheel dominates the frame, but the smaller secondary wheel changes the balance of the entire composition. Together, they create a layered industrial design that almost feels sculptural rather than mechanical. The bolts, rivets, shadows, and worn steel surfaces begin to work together visually once the image is reduced to black and white. Color would have distracted from the textures and forms. Monochrome strips the scene down to weight, shape, and age.

I photographed this on location while exploring the abandoned bank building in McKeesport. Places like this rarely survive untouched forever. Time slowly changes them; pieces disappear, and eventually many are renovated or completely demolished. That temporary nature is part of why I am drawn to photographing forgotten industrial spaces and architecture. They hold evidence of another era of engineering and craftsmanship that feels increasingly distant now.

The details inside this vault mattered to me. The worn metal around the wheel hub. The subtle scratches in the steel panels. The uneven tones across the locking bars where thousands of hands once turned them. Nothing here was staged or manufactured. This was real machinery built with permanence in mind, photographed exactly as I found it.

As a print, this image works particularly well in industrial interiors, offices, loft spaces, cigar rooms, studios, and modern, contemporary environments where texture and structure become part of the room's atmosphere. The balance between abstraction and recognizable subject matter gives it versatility. Some viewers immediately recognize it as a vault door. Others respond to the symmetry and mechanical patterns.

I personally sign each limited-edition print, and each includes a certificate of authenticity. The photograph is produced using archival pigment inks for long-term stability and professional presentation quality. 

If you are drawn to aged machinery, forgotten architecture, and real industrial history, explore my Industrial Wall Art Collection.

© Dan Kosmayer, 2022

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.

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