• "For everything around, us, the corridors are always a welcoming sign of tranquility. A home for those far from home, a room of fond memories, a strip of land created for dreams, a place to inscribe one's hope for greatness." - Head Director Allen David

    There are false truths within that statement of what corridor valley "was" supposed to have in terms of bringing comfort to the numerous scientists and researchers living within Genesis.

    Though not everything at the labs can be considered a wonderful place to be.

    Science can create such wonders, including the unintended horrors as a means of equilibrium because the space of which the labs is built upon, Mother Nature has no control over it; God doesn't even know of the existence of this garden, he can't even see for what it was.

    Like the other two entrance, this one has its own existence and mostly autonomous,
    Corridor 15 is mainly an elevator shaft; although when someone uses it, the only direction is up and down but in the floor plan, it's a horizontal shaft that connects with the Lambda landing pad which is nothing more than a helipad for heavy equipment or bulk supplies for most major projects that can't pass through the main gates or Hellcaster Railway.

    Those who pass by this corridor would mostly feel uneasy or having the feeling that they're being watched by an invisible audience or bystanders who happens to be watching them.

    This doesn't apply to those who work or live close by as if they're completely oblivious of what their colleagues feel.

    In most cases, the rest of the employees choose to avoid Corridor 15, some involuntarily do so as well and almost any job that has an employee passing through that corridor would mostly ask anyone stationed there to handle things like middlemen.

    Well for the psychological effect of why most feel uneasy is the fact that you feel like you're going up or down like an elevator but once you're near the other end of the track, it feels more like a cliff gondola than an elevator shaft.

    There are some reports that it'll take days for the elevator to reach the other end, some even though months had passed when it's only been 10 minutes at the same speed it was programed with. Others were driven mad inside the shaft only to come out sane upon reaching the other end. I'd advice work and apartment rotations since those living or working around Corridor 15 are unaffected by the neurotic nature it has on those who don't operate near it.

    Perhaps in time, all employees who've gone through rotation wouldn't become uneasy around the area and will work peacefully just as the Head Director wished for Corridor Valley.