Forsidebilde av showet These Walls Remember

These Walls Remember

Podkast av Archive 79

engelsk

True crime

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These Walls Remember is a true crime podcast that begins with a place — a house, a building, a room — where something horrific happened. Each episode returns to the scene of a real-life crime to uncover what the walls witnessed: the silence before, the violence during, and the memories that remain. These are stories of forgotten victims, haunted addresses, and the echoes of history that refuse to fade.

Alle episoder

46 Episoder

episode The Pine Street Boarding House cover

The Pine Street Boarding House

Episode Title The Pine Street Boarding House Description On Pine Street in Portland, an aging boarding house once operated the way places like it always do — quietly processing people in transition. Short leases. Locked doors. Shared hallways designed for passing through, not noticing who stayed or who left. When a man was found dead in his room, the explanation came quickly. No signs of struggle. No witnesses. No urgency. The death was classified, the room was cleared, and someone else moved in. The house absorbed the loss the way it absorbed everything else. Years later, paperwork raised questions the building could no longer answer. This episode examines how boarding houses turn absence into routine, how transience erodes accountability, and how renovation becomes the final step in forgetting. The Pine Street house still stands — altered, improved, and convincingly ordinary — its past flattened into silence by design. Because some places don’t hide violence. They make it easy to move on from it.

28. feb. 2026 - 23 min
episode 3520 North Marshall Street cover

3520 North Marshall Street

Episode Title 3520 North Marshall Street Description In a dense block of Philadelphia rowhouses, a narrow brick home at 3520 North Marshall Street functioned like every other on the street. Shared walls. Front steps opening directly onto the sidewalk. A basement meant for storage and utilities, not attention. For years, that basement was used to keep people out of sight, out of sound, and out of expectation. This episode examines how a Philadelphia rowhouse allowed two realities to coexist without colliding — ordinary life above, systematic violence below. Not through secrecy or isolation, but through architecture that encouraged compartmentalization, vertical denial, and the assumption that basements are not places where lives unfold. The house at 3520 North Marshall Street still stands. Its layout unchanged. Its walls intact. A reminder that proximity does not guarantee awareness, and that some spaces don’t need to hide what happens inside them. They only need to be ignored.

21. feb. 2026 - 19 min
episode 8637 Wonderland Avenue cover

8637 Wonderland Avenue

Episode 44 Eight Seven Six Three Wonderland Avenue Description High above Los Angeles, where the Hollywood Hills narrow into winding roads and broken sightlines, a low modern house sits at eight seven six three Wonderland Avenue. Built for privacy, elevation, and isolation, it was a structure designed to keep the outside world at a distance. In August of nineteen eighty one, that isolation became lethal. Inside the house, four people were brutally attacked in a space that fractured sound, movement, and awareness. Rooms divided victims from one another. Hallways disrupted escape. Doors closed without signaling danger beyond their frames. What unfolded inside did not spill outward. It stayed contained, held by architecture that rewarded confusion and delay. This episode examines how the design of eight seven six three Wonderland Avenue shaped the violence that occurred there — not as a backdrop, but as an active environment that absorbed sound, fragmented responsibility, and prolonged survival without rescue. The house still stands, restored and occupied, its geometry unchanged. Because some places don’t just witness crime. They make it easier to disappear inside it.

14. feb. 2026 - 23 min
episode The Duplex in Youngstown cover

The Duplex in Youngstown

Episode Title The Duplex in Youngstown Description On the South Side of Youngstown, a modest duplex stood through the city’s long decline, dividing two lives with a single shared wall. Built to promise separation while enforcing proximity, it carried sound, heat, and presence — but never responsibility. In the mid-nineteen seventies, a renter on one side of the duplex died quietly. No screams were heard. No alarm was raised. For days, life continued on the other side of the wall, televisions playing, routines intact, while a body lay unnoticed just inches away. This episode examines how shared structures can normalize ambiguity — how thin walls blur accountability, how silence becomes tolerable, and how usefulness allows unresolved violence to fade without consequence. The duplex still stands on Youngstown’s South Side, indistinguishable from the others around it, continuing to divide lives exactly as it was designed to do. Because sometimes it isn’t distance that hides a crime. Sometimes it’s proximity without responsibility.

7. feb. 2026 - 23 min
episode The Rowhouse on North Marshall Street cover

The Rowhouse on North Marshall Street

Episode Title The Rowhouse on North Marshall Street Description On North Marshall Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a narrow nineteenth-century rowhouse once operated as a boarding house — a place designed for proximity without responsibility. Brick walls pressed close to neighboring homes. Thin interior partitions divided lives into rooms that shared sound but not concern. In nineteen sixty nine, a tenant died quietly in a back room of the house. No struggle was heard. No alarm was raised. For weeks, the death went unnoticed, absorbed by the routines of shared living and the assumptions that come with transient spaces. When the body was finally discovered, the explanation was convenient, the investigation brief, and the truth nearly lost. This episode examines how a death inside a shared structure can disappear in plain sight — how architecture, routine, and indifference work together to normalize silence. The house still stands on North Marshall Street, indistinguishable from the others in the row, continuing to do what it was built to do. Because sometimes it isn’t violence that hides a crime. It’s the walls that make ignoring it feel reasonable.

31. jan. 2026 - 28 min
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