THE world may not have come to an end.

But an horrific vision of the apocalypse hitting Huddersfield has been created for those curious to see what it could have looked like.

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With the Mayan calendar predicting the world’s end at 11 minutes past 11am yesterday, people around the world were left anxiously waiting on expected Armageddon.

But the predicted time came and went without any reports of the globe being besieged by raining fire or killer earthquakes.

Despite the lack of drama, amateur film-maker, Brent Woods has created his own vision of Huddersfield being torn apart.

Brent, who is chief executive of the Media Centre, created a short video using just his mobile phone.

He said: “I thought it would be a bit of fun on the last day at work before Christmas.

“As I was coming in to work on the day the world was supposed to end I filmed a few bits as I was walking in to the office from the train station.

“It’s done very simply with an iPhone app using off the shelf effects.

“It only took me about 20 minutes to make and it’s intentionally a bit rough.

“But it all ends with a positive message that the world isn’t going to end.”

Around the world events had been organised for people to either gather for the oncoming Armageddon or to celebrate together the continuance of the human race.

Many were drawn to locations where it is believed they have a chance of surviving the apocalypse.

The most prominent of these was a mountain in the French Pyrenees where a giant UFO and aliens were said to be waiting to spirit those nearby to safety.

But the area around the village of Bugarach was reported quiet at 11.11am, apart from those who had flocked there for the event.

In Moscow, former Soviet dictator Josef Stalin’s underground bunker was offering salvation from the world’s end for 1,500 dollars (£920), with a 50% refund if nothing happened.

The bunker, 210ft below ground, was designed to withstand a nuclear attack and all 1,000 tickets were sold.

And in Serbia, the pyramid-shaped peak, Mount Rtanj, drew cultists as a local legend has it that the mountain once swallowed an evil sorcerer who will be released on doomsday in a ball of fire.

The inside of the mountain would then become a safe place to hide as the sorcerer goes on to destroy the rest of the world.

The World’s End pub in Pudsey, Leeds, said it had not made any special plans to mark the event.

A member of staff said: “There wouldn’t be much point if the world was going to end.”