[Suburbia Lost] Blue Ash's Roast Beef Bunker
Ronny Salerno Ronny Salerno

[Suburbia Lost] Blue Ash's Roast Beef Bunker

Built into the hillside with a dining room slightly below the ground is a bunker, a remnant of fast food giant Arby's. Built in 1975, it apparently shut down in 2010 after the property's lease was terminated. The glass atrium dining rooms allowed roast beef sandwich seekers to take in the scenery around them as they enjoyed their meals on tables now stacked on top of each other, collecting dust. There's no more "good mood food" to be found here.

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[Suburbia Lost] Blue Light Special
Ronny Salerno Ronny Salerno

[Suburbia Lost] Blue Light Special

What good is a grocery store if you can't pick up a pair of cheap jean shorts while you're buying Doritos? Yeah, you can get those things at Target and WalMart, but you also can at Kmart - the perennial third place discount mega store. The mega store that has closed and abandoned locations just like this one all across the US.

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The Wasson Way
Ronny Salerno Ronny Salerno

The Wasson Way

If you drive into Cincinnati from the west side and look out over the sprawling network of railroad tracks, industrial cargo and airport-like control tower that watches over the massive rail yard, it's hard to imagine that any railroad in the city would go unused.

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[Suburbia Lost] Buffet Style Restaurant - Sharonville
Ronny Salerno Ronny Salerno

[Suburbia Lost] Buffet Style Restaurant - Sharonville

America has a love affair with buffet style restaurants, but who can blame us? One flat fee, all the delicious food you can eat, subtle elevator music to set the mood, and all under the veil of an authentic cultural experience. You can find buffets everywhere in suburbia, even when they're abandoned.

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Enemy of the State?
Ronny Salerno Ronny Salerno

Enemy of the State?

Given the places I've been to and photographed, does that make me an enemy of the state?

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The "Ghost Ship"
Ronny Salerno Ronny Salerno

The "Ghost Ship"

The slow, choppy waters erratically splash up against the obstruction, banging an offbeat rhythm onto an island of rusted steel. As the Ohio River flows toward the Mississippi, its waters make their way through the American Midwest. Roughly 25 miles downstream from Cincinnati, some of the water diverts to a gap on the southern shore into a creek and up against a ship that seems to have docked for the last time. It's a vessel that fought in two World Wars, served as a yacht, set the scene in a pop star's music video, carried one of the world's greatest minds, and shuttled tourists around the nation's largest city - all before it found itself left to be forgotten by time and history in the murky waters.

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[Suburbia Lost] Captain D's - Sharonville
Ronny Salerno Ronny Salerno

[Suburbia Lost] Captain D's - Sharonville

The people of this nation deserve "freshly prepared seafood at reasonable prices," or so goes the credo on Captain D's website. Unfortunately for those who live near this former seafood eatery on Chester Rd. in Sharonville, they'll have to travel the seven seas a little further these days to get the captain's freshest catch and his corporate branding.

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Film: Seriously, It's Not Hard
Cameron Knight Cameron Knight

Film: Seriously, It's Not Hard

I'm new here at QCD, and you may have noticed my photos have been shot on film. People talk about shooting film like it's coke habit. Expensive, unpredictable and harmful to your libido. I beg to differ.

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Cameron Knight Cameron Knight

Lockland and Seth Foster

Let's start at the beginning. In 1830, the automobile hadn't been invented, steam locomotives were just taking hold on the East Coast, and the first electric motor was only ten years old. So presumably on a horse or on foot, a 16-year-old Seth Foster left Boone County, Kentucky to come to Cincinnati. In 1830, our fair city was home to around 24,000 people according the census and the population was exploding.

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