A TEENAGE girl has tragically died after falling in a notorious abandoned 20-storey hotel in the Canary Islands.
The 13-year-old girl was reportedly playing in the unfinished hotel with friends at the time of the fall.
The hotel, known as the Añaza monstrosity, has open lift shafts and windows and has lain empty for more than 50 years.
Three other girls raised the alarm following the horrific ordeal.
Police quickly arrived at the scene and tried to resuscitate the victim, but sadly she could not be revived.
Other emergency services responded to the scene, including firefighters from the Tenerife Consortium and the Canary Islands Emergency Service (SUC).
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Police believe she fell from the fifth floor onto the rocks below.
A full investigation led by the National Police Homicide Unit has been launched into the teenager’s death, as furious locals say “urgent action” should be taken.
Police believe the girl lived in Añaza, however her nationality has not been released.
The girl’s death is the fifth fatality at the cliff-top building in Añaza, north of Tenerife.
In June, the Santa Cruz City Council and the Tenerife Island Council agreed on a grant to cover the demolition of the decrepit hotel.
The demolition was expected to cost around £1 million, local media reported.
The abandoned building has served as a refuge for young people to practise extreme sports and other illicit activities.
Local residents say intruders had ignored the surrounding fencing and subsequently, the incomplete hotel has been the scene of various accidents.
Historically, the building has been a hot spot for dangerous activity, where just three years ago in 2022, a 50-year-old woman threatened to jump from the 13th storey, before police intervened.
In 2020, two thrill-seekers were caught jumping between the building’s balconies for fun.
The balconies are open to the sky.
In 2017, it was publicly reported that at least four people had died in the building – three accidental deaths and one suspected suicide.
One resident told local media: “The building has completely exposed lift shafts, and anyone entering could easily fall down them if they’re not careful, trip, or plummet from any of the floors.”
It is also common for people to enter the building to fly a drone or launch flares.
Haunting images of the hotel revealed the interior of the mysteriously empty building.
The 22-storey structure has never had a single guest.
Construction was started by a German company in 1973, but was abandoned two years later before the Y-shaped building was completed.
What was meant to be a holiday hotspot is now a seaside skeleton, covering an area of 2,350 square metres.
Several accidents have reportedly taken place in the structure, including the death of a man who was capturing pigeons in the hotel.