Tunnel Visionary
Intrepid explorer Julia Solis finds beauty in the ruins of derelict urban structures
- By Stephen P. Williams
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2004, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
The photographs she took incessantly she would later use on her Web site. One of the most creative of the dozens devoted to urban exploration, Solis' site bills itself as "providing blind archaeologists with the finest quality flashlights." Solis also holds elaborate participatory events, like the time she took 50 or so neophytes on a haunting walk through dripping darkness, past hibernating bats and strange stalagmites into New York City's abandoned Croton Aqueduct, which was completed in 1842. A mile or so into the tunnel, deep under the Bronx, the crowd was treated to a surprise fireworks show, with rockets spinning along the tunnel's rounded walls. Then a spelunker's ladder was dropped from a manhole in the ceiling, and the walkers climbed up to find themselves on a busy New York City sidewalk. "I'm a conduit for communicating the potential of these dark places to other people," Solis tells me. She first began exploring as a young girl in her native Germany, when she took a group of neighborhood kids into a culvert near her home in Hamburg. But her passion didn't kick into full gear until about ten years ago when she relocated from Los Angeles to New York City, where she now works as a freelance writer and translator.
She's never been married, and isn't, she says, much interested in having children. Her boyfriend is a taciturn graffitist who has painted his autobiography on hundreds of panels scattered throughout the New York City subway system—obviously a match made in heaven.
As we followed the track beds of the dark Rochester subway tunnel, we came to an area that was flooded with golden, late-afternoon light, as though we had just entered a painting by Vermeer. The light came from small openings where the tunnel ceiling met an automobile overpass. Cars passed, chu chunk, chu chunk, over a manhole cover above our heads.
"That's one of my favorite sounds," Solis said, as though it were a lullaby.
A chair sat on a square of plywood on the dirt floor of the tunnel. A real estate flyer, a pornographic magazine and an empty box of antidepressants formed a poignant tableau. Soon, the tunnel ended at a verdant slope leading up to the city streets. We had no idea where we were, and the neighborhood seemed a little rough. A group of kids taunted us and threw rocks as we reentered society. "It's a hazardous profession," Solis said, as we headed for the tall buildings visible across the river.
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