The year was a renaissance for the underground movement known as "Night Crawling" in Galicia. After the lockdowns of 2020, the shadows called the restless back. At the heart of this resurgence was the enigmatic site known only as FU10 .
By late 2021, a winter storm (Storm Armand) tore the eastern facade off FU10. The building was officially "terminal." Night crawlers rushed to see it before it collapsed into the sea. Part 5: The Danger – Why You Shouldn't Do It Now This article serves as a historical document, not an invitation. As of late 2022 and into 2023, FU10 has changed. fu10 the galician night crawling 2021
In the vast, rainy, and mystical landscape of Galicia, Spain, history does not simply fade away; it rusts, crumbles, and whispers. For urban explorers (urbex enthusiasts) and "night crawlers," the region is a Holy Grail. But within the community, three numbers carry a legendary, almost forbidden weight: . The year was a renaissance for the underground
Have a firsthand account of FU10 in 2021? Contact us at [email protected] – anonymity guaranteed. By late 2021, a winter storm (Storm Armand)
While Paris has its catacombs and Tokyo has its drainage tunnels, Galicia has the sotobosque (undergrowth). Night crawling in Galicia is distinct because of the Moro —a dense, supernatural fog that rolls in from the Atlantic without warning.
This article dives deep into what FU10 is, why 2021 was the peak year for crawling its corridors, and how the Galician night crawling scene evolved from a hobby into a cultural phenomenon. To the uninitiated, "FU10" sounds like a military designation or a forgotten software patch. In the lexicon of Galician urbex, it is a codename for one of the most dangerous and awe-inspiring abandoned industrial complexes on the Atlantic coast.