CONTRIBUTORS
LINKS
INFO

Urban Explorer Handbook 2006
- Up on the Roof
- They have evidence
- Give me Shelter
- Get Your War On
- The Final Frontier
- It's No Secret
- Under the Big Top
- Hidden Treasures
- Have I.D. Ready
- Stuck in the Middle with You
- Habeas Corpus
- The Big White One
- Tunnel Vision
- Top O' The Town
- Do Not Cheer, Do Not Despoil the Logo
- The Thunder Down Below
- You've Got The Power
- Just Give It A Little Tug
Where: Inside the minarets on the roof of Plant Hall, University of Tampa
Public access: Close to nil. Dignitaries and visiting alums get the occasional tour of Minaret #1 (north of the main entrance), which has been cleaned up a bit. The other towers are off-limits -- though rumor has it a few intrepid souls have allegedly gained access to the turrets for amorous purposes.
Element of danger: Standing atop Plant Hall can make you feel a little weak in the knees, especially when you consider what would happen if you tripped on one of the ribs in the stainless steel roof. And when you climb up inside one of the corner minarets, then perch on the window ledge just below the turret, trying not to look down at the gaping maw of the trap door you came up through -- well, let's just say a good sense of balance is a plus.
Why we went: UT's Alhambra-meets-Disneyland roof ornaments have always made us wonder: Can you get inside those things? Is there office space?
What we discovered: UT Public Information Director Grant Donaldson led us down the hall from his fourth floor office, up a dark, dusty stairway -- and out onto a Moorish roofscape with a 360-degree view of Tampa. "No one ever comes here but me," said Donaldson of the minaret we visited at the roof's southeast corner. Its four levels (each about 12 feet in diameter) looked pretty forlorn, but conditions used to be much worse: when workers began renovations several years ago, they found rotten timber, broken windows, pigeon guano inches deep and, in one tower, a family of white owls. (Construction had to be stopped till they moved out.) A few brave souls have visited since; a couple named "Justin M. + Heather M. 9/12/98," for instance, made it to the top and graffitied their names to prove it.
Working weekends, Donaldson says he hears visitors rattling doors in the corridor as they try to find a way up to the roof. Hint: The refurbished, larger Minaret #1 is accessible only through a (locked) door to the left of the ladies' room (#418). About halfway up is a mysterious little aerie with skinny arched windows. Donaldson surmises it might have been an apartment for one of the waiters at the old Plant Hotel. In recent times, it's been used for at least one wedding.











COMMENTS
RE: Up On The Roof
Posted by Von K on 02.20.07 @ 01:03 PM
I was lucky enough to find the door you describe unlocked one night as I aimlessly walked the campus. This was in 2003. The door has been locked every time I've tried it since.