Dilapidated Metro
The metro station lies forgotten beneath the city, a cavern of concrete and rust where time has been allowed to rot in plain sight. Cracked pillars sag under their own weight, their once-smooth surfaces eaten away by moisture and neglect. The tracks are choked with weeds and creeping vines that spill from shattered tunnels, nature reclaiming what steel and stone once forced into order. Moss carpets the platform edges, softening the harsh geometry of the station with a quiet, relentless green.
Silence dominates the space, broken only by the slow drip of water echoing through the tunnels and the faint rustle of leaves where sunlight slips through collapsed sections of the ceiling. What was once a artery of movement and noise has become a hollow relic—part ruin, part canvas, part garden—where decay, defiance, and nature coexist in uneasy stillness.