Urban explorer Nacho Labrador doesn't even want to tell you where this abandoned porcelain doll factory is located, and not only because he's trying to preserve the space as much as possible. There's something really off about the abandoned building…
It's presumed that sculptor Ramon Ingles from Valencia, Spain, was connected to the porcelain dolls that were made in this factory. While porcelain dolls were historically mostly made in Germany and France in the 1800's, they've been a part of many different cultures for much longer, and they're still considered collectables today. They're also incredibly creepy. The Bisque porcelain has a matte finish, resembling human flesh. The realistic features only add to the life-like characteristics that make is easy for the dolls to become stars of horror movies.
For some reason, this particular factory, possibly located in Spain, was suddenly and unexpectedly abandoned. Left to turn to dust, the walls are stacked full of boxes of limbless bodies, detached arms with pudgy hangs grabbing at the air, and shattered porcelain faces.
Another explorer claims that when he entered the same factory, he found remnants of some kind of ritual involving sacrificed chickens strung up on crosses. He took a doll head home and supposedly "had to return it," for reasons he was too spooked to share. There are no photos of his experience , but he was sure of one thing: that this building is cursed.
You couldn't get me within 100 miles of this place… wherever it is.
If you think you'd have the guts to walk through the three-story cursed doll factory… SHARE with your friends!