The Escher Vault

History
The Escher Vault is a labyrinth, shifting vault that contains the personal effects of bronzed individuals. The Vault was designed by one of the original Warehouse 13 founders, M.C. Escher, who based the design and abilities of the vault off of previous artworks he had created. Later in life, he would eventually be bronzed and his personal possessions ended up in the ingenious prison he had helped create.

In 2010, former agent gone rogue James MacPherson had infiltrated the Warehouse and de-bronzed H. G. Wells, who entered the Vault with a device of her own invention and retrieved several of her personal effects.

Mechanics
To maintain its complexity, three artifacts are used to create the confusion and movement within the Escher Vault. The first artifact collected by Warehouse 13, Escher’s Mirror Ball, distorts the room’s dimensions to make it too complex to conceptualize an escape route. Next, the Cretan Labyrinth Archway warps the room even further, making it into an inescapable maze. Finally, Oscar Reutersvärd’s Möbius Strip allows the architecture the room began with to split apart and reform in wild combinations, which also prevents navigable areas from popping up.

For agents to enter it, they need to enter a password into a Penrose triangle shaped template to open the entrance and a secret compartment containing Philibert Aspairt's Chartreuse-Glass Goggles, which can allow users to easily navigate the shifting maze

Contents

 * Henry Every
 * Parasol
 * Subhas Chandra Bose:
 * Briefcase: Contains all his files on captured and possible artifact sightings. Some reports have still been unverified to this day.
 * Paracelsus
 * Sword: Called "Azoth", as seen on the pommel. In a hollowed out compartment within the handle, it contains a counter poison to almost any injury, whether physical, mental or spiritual.
 * Medicine Bag: When any container with a sealed liquid is placed within, it becomes a highly fatal poison. Putting the container back in a second time turns it into an antidote.
 * Milton Vernon Laswell
 * Cryptogram: Is currently undecipherable to modern day software and cryptography artifacts.
 * Bonnie Parker
 * Poetry: Mentions her great love towards criminal lover Clyde Barrow.