Wimdy.
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Wimdy.
Springer NM, RA Clayton
Wave EXPLORE 318 by TONY...... http://flic.kr/p/UEpzyp
Northam Burrows - A Little Risk for a Picture
Northam Burrows sits where the Taw and Torridge Estuary opens out toward Bideford Bay — a place of sand, salt marsh, old stones, big sky and shifting ground.
These were taken around The Skern, where the tide fills and empties the mudflats and the land never feels entirely settled. It is beautiful, but it is not soft. Deep channels, wet mud, fast water, and that strange estuary silence all remind you to watch your step.
I took these with one eye on the photograph and the other on whether I was about to sink into the mud.
The reward was that extraordinary North Devon light: hard, silver, bruised by cloud, turning the beach, the bike, the rocks and the coast path into something half real, half remembered.
Worth the risk.
Carefully.
Urban explorers uncover worsening decay at two Westward Ho! ‘Atlantic’ sites
Fresh footage sheds new light on the long-term deterioration of two prominent derelict buildings in Westward Ho! — structures that have shaped local conversation for years.
By Ray Smith – The Appledore Channel / North Devon Community Desk
Recent videos released by YouTuber TroyBot14 have brought renewed attention to two abandoned Westward Ho! developments: the Atlantic Apartments off Nelson Road and the older Atlantic Flatlets on Atlantic Way. Both buildings have become part of the area’s visual landscape, their stalled construction and slow decline raising questions about planning, ownership, and safety in one of North Devon’s busiest coastal communities.
With many residents having watched these shells stand untouched year after year, the footage forms the clearest recent record of how far deterioration has progressed — and the challenges these derelict sites pose for the surrounding area.
Atlantic Apartments: a modern build frozen in time
In the first film, Urban Exploring Derelict Seaside Holiday Homes / Flat Block, the explorer moves through the unfinished Atlantic Apartments, a development originally pitched as high-spec coastal accommodation.
Construction halted abruptly several years ago. Inside, the rooms remain exactly as they were left:
rusting steelwork and bare concrete
internal walls stripped or collapsed
exposed wiring
plasterboard, tiles and flooring left where builders placed them
signs of squatting, including improvised bedding and barriers
Despite being a relatively new build, water damage, salt-air corrosion, and vandalism have accelerated decay. The explorer’s footage shows walkways crumbling and rooms that have never benefitted from proper weatherproofing.
Atlantic Flatlets: fire damage and structural failure in an older block
The second video, Urban Exploring Old Abandoned Atlantic Flatlets – 2nd Visit, documents the nearby Atlantic Flatlets, an older building whose deterioration has been more dramatic.
The footage reveals:
extensive fire damage
multiple rooms reduced to soot-blackened shells
weakened floors and ceilings
roof sections torn open during storms
evidence of repeated blazes over several years
The degree of destruction in the Flatlets appears to have increased since earlier urban-explorer visits, with structural integrity now visibly compromised.
Part of a wider collapse
Both Westward Ho! buildings were once linked to wider development ambitions that collapsed during a period of insolvency. As that situation unfolded, contractors, investors and residents across the UK identified similar issues at more than twenty other incomplete or abandoned schemes involving connected companies and directorships.
Some raised concerns with national authorities. The Serious Fraud Office reviewed aspects of the case but later closed its inquiry without reaching findings or locating key individuals.
For many in the community, the Atlantic sites became symbols of this wider pattern: promising starts, sudden stops, and long local consequences.
Community concerns: safety, visibility and accountability
Because both sites sit close to residential areas and the seafront, locals have repeatedly raised concerns about:
unsafe access for young people
exposed steelwork and open drops
weakened floors and roof sections
fire hazards in the Flatlets
unsecured entry points
the visual impact on Westward Ho!’s popular coastal routes
The videos show that the buildings remain open and accessible.
Torridge District Council has previously stated that both structures are in private ownership, and have passed through receivership stages — limiting the authority’s power to act without cooperation from owners.
No recent planning submissions indicate imminent redevelopment.
Landmarks of limbo
Whatever happens next, both the Atlantic Apartments and Atlantic Flatlets have become familiar landmarks — not through their intended use, but through their prolonged abandonment.
For local residents, they are reminders of:
the fragility of large-scale coastal development
the wider fallout from complex insolvency cases
the need for clearer oversight on prominent sites
the importance of safeguarding structures left in limbo
As Westward Ho! continues to grow and evolve, these decaying buildings remain at the centre of local concern — for their safety risks, their visibility, and what they represent in the wider story of North Devon’s changing coastline.
🌬️ Windy ASMR Coastal Walk | Westward Ho! → Northam Burrows 🌊
Come with me for a wild, sunlit coastal walk through North Devon. Starting at the golf club end of Sandymere (Westward Ho!), I make my way along the beach—wind howling, waves crashing, and the sun glowing above. It’s just me, the sound of nature… and my bike, which I had to carry across boulders and shifting pebbles while filming.
A peaceful, raw slice of seaside life—perfect for late-night headphones or calming background vibes.
✨ No talking. Just ambient sounds and a little silent determination.
📍 Route: Westward Ho! Golf Club (Sandymere) → along the beach → Northam Burrows Car Park
🎧 ASMR features:
Whistling wind
Rhythmic waves
Pebble crunching
The quiet effort of hauling a bike through nature
Westward Ho! beach, Devon, Jun 2024.
Westward Ho! beach, Devon, Jun 2024.