Another great slideshow, including abandoned theaters and libraries.
This abandoned police station really creeps me out for some reason...
That's some shit straight out of Batman.
Another great slideshow, including abandoned theaters and libraries.
This abandoned police station really creeps me out for some reason...
I always wonder, be curious to hear how GAF thinks, Do you guys think Detroit will ever turn it around? I mean it is interesting in a very morbid way to watch an entire city disintegrate, but surely something can be done?
I grew up in Auburn Hills, a small city directly beside Rochester Hills. Rochester Hills and Auburn Hills are about an hour to an hour and a half away from Detroit, and they are their own individual cities. The closest connection they have to Detroit is the term Metro Detroit, which is applied to all nearby cities filled with the people who have wisely abandoned Detroit.
What's so disturbing about many of those photos isn't just the decay of beautiful architecture, but the fact that many of the places are overflowing with abandoned books, paperwork, and other materials.
I mean, you'd expect a closed library or police station to at least clear out their stuff before leaving. It almost looks like they fled the buildings and didn't have time to do it.
Detroit is one of the most fascinating cities in the world, people throughout the rust belt and in countries with negative population growth like Japan and Italy should be paying attention.
Rough areas? Sure. But most industrialized nations have nothing like this. This is the total collapse of a major urban centre. I wouldn't know where, outside of the former Soviet Union and other former communist states, to find something like that in the industrialized world.
The Former Soviet Union has a wealth of abandoned shit. Nothing will ever match it.
http://weburbanist.com/2008/01/27/7...-submarine-stations-to-unfinished-structures/
This is oddly beautiful though
I want to start a Kickstarter campaign to raise the money to renovate this place. I sooooo want to live there!
Hence why I said except for that.
Thousands of towns and villages in the former USSR are completely abandoned because the one factory they depended on closed. The declining population is all clustering in a few areas.
Jesus, I gotta laugh at the dude talking about downtown Detroit like it's something out of Escape From New York. I've lived in metro Detroit for 15 years, and in 15 years of going into the main cultural area of the city for school (grad school at Wayne State) and going to Lions and Tigers games, the Detroit Symphony, the Institute of Art, rock shows at the Majestic and Magic Stick, etc, I've never had anything happen other than a panhandler asking for money. And I've done plenty of this by myself. There are some truly fucked up, shitty areas of the city, but to say that you're taking your life in your hands once you cross into the city limits is total bullshit.
We haven't even mentioned the fact that whites got scared in the late 1960s and started leaving the cities in droves. And that Coleman Young was an asshole who did NOTHING to try and rehabilitate the city's image, but basically encouraged the white/black divide, and he kept getting re-elected.
And then there's the fact that the Big Three basically pushed the automobile as the future and Detroit as its shining example. Fifty years later and the urban sprawl is flat-out nasty. There's no public transit to speak of besides a decimated bus system that no one rides because "only poor people ride the bus".
There's a ton of reasons why Detroit is what it is today. There's no reason to think it can't be fixed, but it will take a lot of time, money and effort. As a former resident of the metro area, I would like to see it one day be a better city.
EDIT: Also, should mention they do have a Whole Foods now.
It's a long and complicated story that I don't entirely understand. Basically, the United States used to be the world's manufacturing powerhouse, since it had the most and most modern infrastructure and a huge supply of metal from American mines. However, in the sixties and seventies, most of the metal ran out, the infrastructure became old (compared to the newer infrastructure in Germany, Japan, etc.), and US manufacturing couldn't compete, and the entire industry collapsed, putting huge amounts of people out of jobs.
Some cities in the north, like Detroit and Cleveland, were mainly devoted to manufacturing, and when the jobs left, so did the people...at least, those who could leave. The cities began to decay. Detroit is probably the most severe case of this.
Banks won't give you money to repair the homes, as they have no value. There are no jobs for people to need a home.
Just do a google image search for "abandoned Detroit" and look what you find.....
and you'd just be another person helping fuck the city over by buying land and leaving it abandoned, waiting on the day it'll be worth more so you can sell it. No intention to do anything with the land. No intention to maintain it. No intention to even check on it.I wish I was making a decent amount of money, I would start buying up land.
and you'd just be another person helping fuck the city over by buying land and leaving it abandoned, waiting on the day it'll be worth more so you can sell it. No intention to do anything with the land. No intention to maintain it. No intention to even check on it.
That same mentality has been fucking over Detroit and its recovery for decades. But I'm sure you didn't know that.
I wish I was making a decent amount of money, I would start buying up land.
You can't be in two places at once. You can't make decent money somewhere and then devote the time and energy it takes to revitalize property.
That's what dreams-vision was trying to say.
Who said I was leaving it empty? Thanks for being a presumptuous ass.
Be honest! That's not what you meant at all. That's such a long range plan, your original comment doesn't even make sense in this context. Do you know how long this project Detroit is working on is going to take them? At least another decade. Probably more. You were talking of potentially buying property NOW...presumably (going back to my point) to hold until the new "renaissance", at which time you can find a way to make money.Oh, I know that. If they cut the city limits and focused on moving people. You could tear down all the buildings that are vacant around the new city limits. Slowly build a few suburbs around Detroit and move a company (if you have one) in the city. Start a new business around town.
But I don't have that kind of money or a business and politics would kill me. D:
This stuff is fascinating and severely depressing at once. Seeing this and beeing in coal-dominated areas in West Virginia give me an idea of what my home town is most likely going to look like in 30 years when that industry is gone. This area's economy relies entirely on one dying industry and is doing nothing to soften the blow when it goes away completely.
Be honest! That's not what you meant at all. That's such a long range plan, your original comment doesn't even make sense in this context. Do you know how long this project Detroit is working on is going to take them? At least another decade. Probably more. You were talking of potentially buying property NOW...presumably (going back to my point) to hold until the new "renaissance", at which time you can find a way to make money.
It's part of the problem, dogg. At no offense intended. But we all know nobody buys land 10-15 years before they can use it (with a possibility that they can never use it) with the plan to open up a business there in like...2025. Maybe some large multi-national who can afford to do that.
What's so disturbing about many of those photos isn't just the decay of beautiful architecture, but the fact that many of the places are overflowing with abandoned books, paperwork, and other materials.
I mean, you'd expect a closed library or police station to at least clear out their stuff before leaving. It almost looks like they fled the buildings and didn't have time to do it.
Sorry for being dumb
My best knowledge of Detroit before this thread was just that they have a really good hockey team and when there are camera shots from the sky down to the arena, it looks like a big fancy city.
this actually. People's information is right there for the taking, an identity thief's dream really. Books that might worth something if they were simply sold left to rot into oblivion.
How is it that the American way of dealing with "old stuff" and "financial problems" is: leave it to rot in the fucking dessert?
(the Arizona plane graveyard, which should really be reused, but instead is just left to sit there)
Maintenance budgets were one of the first ones slashed over the last twenty years. There simply isn't the money left to pay people to clear out the buildings.
Exactly! That's the weirdest part for me and makes some of those pics super creepy. It's as if everyone just fled and didn't look back.What's so disturbing about many of those photos isn't just the decay of beautiful architecture, but the fact that many of the places are overflowing with abandoned books, paperwork, and other materials.
I mean, you'd expect a closed library or police station to at least clear out their stuff before leaving. It almost looks like they fled the buildings and didn't have time to do it.
Another great slideshow, including abandoned theaters and libraries.
This abandoned police station really creeps me out for some reason...
Detroit could soon be the ultimate vacation for survivalist and end of the world nuts.
Jesus, I gotta laugh at the dude talking about downtown Detroit like it's something out of Escape From New York. I've lived in metro Detroit for 15 years, and in 15 years of going into the main cultural area of the city for school (grad school at Wayne State) and going to Lions and Tigers games, the Detroit Symphony, the Institute of Art, rock shows at the Majestic and Magic Stick, etc, I've never had anything happen other than a panhandler asking for money. And I've done plenty of this by myself. There are some truly fucked up, shitty areas of the city, but to say that you're taking your life in your hands once you cross into the city limits is total bullshit.
If you're not from the USA and you aren't super interested in the culture, it's easy to forget that some places over there aren't like Manhattan. Especially considering Detroit is a pretty big outlier.. I don't think any other big city had that sort of development over the last 50 years.
That's just the greatest thing about living in Michigan, you know? Tight knit communities you can't get anywhere else.This is a good example of what Detroit is facing:
They have to provide services for miles and miles of almost entirely vacant neighborhoods.
Wow, I think it's about time to bring back my half written Detroit vampire novel.
There's still this notion around the world that the US is a shining beacon of prosperity. To many, the idea that one of its great cities has decayed this far is absurd.
And this isn't even the first time. There was this episode of Top Gear in season 9 when they visited the USA and they just couldn't believe how bad New Orleans looked years after hurricane Katrina.
The USA would be my dream country if they'd embrace some stuff from the European "socialist" countries.
Jesus, I gotta laugh at the dude talking about downtown Detroit like it's something out of Escape From New York. I've lived in metro Detroit for 15 years, and in 15 years of going into the main cultural area of the city for school (grad school at Wayne State) and going to Lions and Tigers games, the Detroit Symphony, the Institute of Art, rock shows at the Majestic and Magic Stick, etc, I've never had anything happen other than a panhandler asking for money. And I've done plenty of this by myself. There are some truly fucked up, shitty areas of the city, but to say that you're taking your life in your hands once you cross into the city limits is total bullshit.
Mogk said landowners can demand many times what property would fetch on the open market.
Truthfully New Orleans wasn't the nicest/cleanest place even before Katrina.
I agree totally....
For instance, i got my car towed once while at a tiger game (Comerica Park.. it was my fault), but anyways inpound lot was well beyond Michigan Central... so me and my friend walked all the way there to get the car out.. through downtown out past old Tiger Stadium, past the abandond train station, through the rough neighbor hood to get my car.... and i lived to tell the tale.. (In fact there were few people even out and about)
Detroit trully never recovered from the riots in 68' and that just increased the speed of people leaving the city for the suburbs.... while there are lots of bright sopts (Alot of them down town in "Fox town" , Greek Town, Around Wayne State University, and the new Center Area, Mexican Town et.c) alot of the actual out lying Neighborhood of Detroit are in bad shape.
The City is way to big Area wise and the population is to low to bing in enough Tax money to provide services.... whichis why the plans to contract the city are moving forward....
My mom and Aunt tell me stories all the time about when they grew up in detroit and it sounds like it wa a very nice place to live.....inthe late 40's early 50's
TY. I did not know. I tried to comment on the fact that it seems that the government does not rebuild or try to save these places like in other industrialized countries. Japan did a remarkable job in that department. Cant even think of the disaster if a similar quake/tsunami hit the west coast.