>>149588>And there's probably no point bringing a camera unless you bring a tripod, it will be too dark.Will standard flash not work for some reason?
>>149591I might need to stress that it's not an actual cathedral—that's just supposedly the shape of the room.
I'll paste the description of the inside of the pipe:
>You can enter this system via the pipe just off the (x) foot bridge. It goes straight for quite a while until you get to a small moat and a wall that you have to jump over and climb. Once you negotiate this obstacle you head into a large cathedral-like vault (this appears to be the Polk Street Vault) -- perhaps a couple stories high. This room is located underneath the big square of concrete in the park over by the playground, sort of. In the Cathedral, there are a couple pipes branching off from here, sometimes they have a floodgate down on one or both of them, but if you head straight down the pipe, you'll eventually get to the downtown (local city) area. This takes several hours to walk. I always went in the middle of summer but the thought of flash floods gave me the heebejeebees.Nowhere does the description say it's a mile, but that's my personal guess. It says you have to walk "a while" which could be just 200 yards for all I know, but it also says that exploring the entire route and ending up downtown (which is about 2-2.5 miles from the entrance) can take several hours.
The description mentions a "Polk Street Vault". There's a North Polk Street literally 50 yards from the entrance of the vault and a standard Polk Street that stretches from about 600 yards to 2.5 miles away depending on which end of the street the vault is on. I have never seen this supposed vault from above ground, but then again I don't go to that part of town very often.
Pic: random picture of a bench on a landing on a set of stairs at the ocean I took a year ago.