We are back in Fukushima, to document more of the exclusion zone.
In this episode we visit an abandoned nursing home.
Our original plan was to hike to villages like Futaba, deep in the red zone and explore the area.
Futaba is the last untouched village since the nucleair disaster, because the radiation is too high to work.
When we finally arrive in Futaba, it's not  untouched at all.
Roads have been renewed and many buildings are demolished or renovated.
When we almost get spotted by a patrol car we decide to turn back, dissappointed we change our plans.
We're lucky, there's nobody at the gate.
Nice
Imagine you're in that building and see the tsunami coming.
I've read the time of the clock is still standing on the exact time of the impact of the tsunami.
Which time was that?
-We'll find out now.
This dike has to prevent future tsunami's
There will be more.
-We had an earthquake here last year.
It's a huge construction site.
So in this building somebody survived the tsunami.
Exactly 15:35, on march 11th it happened.
It must be a symbolic building.
Here you see the devastating result.
It reminds me of that school we have visited last year with that gym.
So that guy stood probably here.
He must have thought "oh no"
From here you have a good view of the dike.
And in the distance there is a lot of radioactive waste.
Camera's.
-It really is indeed.
Everything is monitored here.
Another open gate.
red zone, welcome.
We drove through an open gate.
Close to a location we want to check out, but the roads are not maintained.
Frederik is breaking branches.
Otherwise it's gonna be an expensive trip.
We're hiking to an abandoned nursing home.
Something which we haven't visited before in the exclusion zone.
You can see it in the distance. Curious what we'll get to see.
A helicopter.
It's coming fast in our direction.
-Run.
Maybe there's an open door?
It's open.
It's crazy that so many doors are open.
-Yeah.
That was easy, we're inside now.
Didn't expect that much decay already.
Check this.
Some kind of elderly house, elderly diapers.
mmm nice !
I think when the air alarm went off they gathered most people in this room. There are some beds missing in other rooms.
I think people who were not able to leave by themselves. Is there ventilation equipment right there?
So they gathered here.
-Can't imagine the panic.
You wonder how it all went here, crazy
You can see wild boars found food.
They opened the fridge and ate everything.
The boss vending machines are like our coke vending machines.
These haven't moved in 7 years. They're stuck to the ground.
Another open door.
Laundry.
That's funny, a bathtub with  door.
Just slide them in.
With these chairs.
Same size. funny.
Here they could push the people in the pool.
Also with this crane.
Is this a real one?
Is this it a real one?
-No clue
I think so.
A double barrel.
-Why would you need this in Japan, everybody is behaving.
Almost no criminality.
Strange they have this around in a nursing  home.
Maybe when people needed a real rest.
-Eternal rest.
Some kind of schedule.
schedule of activities perhaps.
The humidity was really important here.
So you see a lot of airco's
Typical Ryokan style, where you sleep on a matress. It looks like a pyama party.
Smaller rooms. "Just" 6 persons.
Everything is still in place. Drawings, pictures...
Cards from their family.
Nice with all those details.
When this person needed something..
Probably woke a lot of people during the night.
Must have been a lot of work to evacuate all these people. -With a bus.
Offices overthere.
Imagine evacuating a hospital with people who are reliant on equipment.
-Almost impossible.
Footprints. Wild boars roamed around here.
Big prints, and they chewed on things.
1.5 microsievert.
More luxurious rooms.
-2 persons? No I think 4.
In every room are calendars.
March 2011.
Everywhere.
-Everywhere.
Those dolls are cool.
Probably one of the activities here, origami.
Whiskey? -Yes, limited edition
These roam around for real now.
50 times bigger because of the radiation.
It's wierd to see stuffed boars, you barely see them in Europe.
Here in Japan you can expect everything.
