AN ABANDONED luxury resort rotting away in the Maldives with derelict villas and dirty pools has become shrouded in mystery.
A island within the holiday hotspot â which is usually known for its picturesque sights and tropical landscapes â holds a string of villas which have been .



Once a promising paradise-to-be, the resort sits on one of the archipelago islands, situated southwest of Sri Lanka in the Indian Ocean.
star Kale Brock revealed the in avideoposted to thesite.
The Australian said his group spotted the in the distance while on holiday with a tour guide in the Maldives â and convinced him to take them there.
Extraordinary footage showed the group touring , as well as piles of debris and dilapidated bedrooms.
Broken toilets stood aside at the swanky hotel surrounded by swathes of tropical forest.
Unkempt pools overflowing with algae can also be seen alongside generators which haven’t been powered in years.
Brock told that the island was supposedly owned by a prominent Maldivian politician.
And he said that construction on the resort reportedly started over a decade ago.
The surfer and YouTuber said: “They were building for two years then for ‘political reasons’.
“We don’t really know, ostensibly maybe they ran out of money.”;
He explained: “They’ve literally ... There’s bathtubs in unopened but deteriorating boxes.”;
Shocking footage also showed unopened spa equipment and massage tables â which were never used to accommodate visitors.
A centrepiece pool filled with murky water and dead bits of plants is also seen on the resort.
The only bit of life that can be seen is the lush palm trees which tower over the forgotten construction.
In one eerie corner of the island, the group stumble across an old Mazda and Nissan â both caked in rust and clearly untouched for years.



They press on to a creepy generator room, lined with bizarre, old machines.
Explorer Brock said the scenes reminded him of films like Ghostbusters, Jurassic Park, and Lost.
Chilling footage showed the most harrowing part of the island, and its supposed crown jewels.
Luxury overwater bungalows that were meant to rake in $5,000 a night sit completely empty, now just crumbling skeletons of wood and steel.
Brock is also seen strolling along a half-destroyed concrete platform where a fancy boardwalk should have been if the project was finished.
Peering out at the sea, Brock said: “World-class lives one kilometre away.”;

