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Showing posts with label Detroit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit. Show all posts

Friday, August 28, 2009

Detroit II - Architecture

Local Architecture Cincinnati goes to Detroit


The post last week, "Local Architecture Goes to Detroit," provided some examples of abandoned neighborhoods in Detroit, an effect of the population decline and migration the city has experienced. This second post is an attempt to display some of grand architecture that has decayed and may cease to exist during many of our lifetimes.


”AbandonedAbandoned Michigan Central Station and the Detroit skyline from the top floor of the tower.


Any research or observation into abandonment in Detroit is in a class of its own. It’s not very hard to find spectacular images (here and here for starters) or excellent narrative (this, this, or this) of the subject matter all over the internet, and it has now become easy to find people incapable of photography or journalism criticizing the former (the hipsters at Vice). It’s also easy to find those who fight for preservation (here and here), and those who fight for demolition (Detroit City Council, among others). What is tough to find, however, is an architectural observation and response.


Local Architecture doesn’t pretend to be journalism or artistic photography, and it doesn’t pretend to be a historical society. It’s architectural documentation of the unique cases of abandonment that infest Cincinnati and other Midwestern cities - in this case: Detroit. The intent is to arrive at a thesis that can help approach urban decay with a reasonably feasible goal and methodology.


Detroit: Abandoned Skyscrapers Downtown
David Broderick Tower (rear) is completely abandoned, as is the building in the foreground. Overall, 48 vacant buildings exist in downtown Detroit, where the office vacancy is nearly 30% (Source) ... raising the question of what to do with historical, beautiful architecture that has no foreseeable usage. Click the image to launch the photo gallery of abandoned skyscrapers.


Detroit: Abandoned Hotels Downtown
The Hotel Eddystone and the Park Avenue Hotel are both empty historically significant buildings. Click the image to launch the photo gallery of these two buildings. Comment with any input or ideas on how to utilize them.


Detroit: Abandoned Church
This is one of dozens of abandoned churches in Detroit. Not only are they architecturally significant, they are spiritually significant. Click the image to launch the churches photo gallery.


Detroit: Michigan Central Station
Michigan Central Station is the most common buildings used as an example of blight in Detroit. You've probably seen it in most major newspapers and networks at once time or another, or in movies like Naqoykatsi, and more recently Transformers. It’s overuse is indicative of the significance this building has, as one of the most beautiful train stations ever built. Click the image to launch the Michigan Central Station photo gallery.


Next week I will update the blog with the third and final section on Detroit, before I return to Cincinnati and continue my explorations there.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Local Architecture Goes to Detroit

Local Architecture Cincinnati goes to Detroit


While every post thus far on Local Architecture has dealt with urban decay as it is experienced in Cincinnati, a recent trip to Detroit put things into a perspective that had to be shared here.


The study of abandonment must convene upon Detroit at one point or another. No other city in the United States has undergone such a dramatic level of population decline, abandonment, and urban decay over the past few decades.


Detroit: Abandoned Michigan Central Station
Detroit's infamous Michigan Central Station has been completely abandoned since 1988. This building will be the subject of another post coming later this week!


As many of the posts under the research section of this site convey, industry in America has toppled and left behind an amazing amount of abandoned and decaying architecture. Detroit, the nation’s most industrious city, reflects this in a unique way. The failing industry was met with social, racial, and political tensions. Hundreds of thousands of people fled the city, and today the population is less than half of what it was in 1950 (For a detailed analysis of Detroit’s fall, visit this page). Such a dramatic “un-densification” affected every realm of the city. Factories closed doors, jobs disappeared (to this day, Detroit has over 17% unemployment) and soon after, residents left. The middle and upper classes vanished in search of suburbs and other cities, leaving behind a massive lower class with no means to maintain a city that quickly became twice the built size it needed to be.


Detroit: Abandoned Houses
An example of abandoned housing stock in Detroit.


Today, not only is nearly half of Detroit’s 138 square mile area vacant, beautiful architecture is left with no hope of use. There is simply not enough demand to sustain the amount and character of architecture. The city is a case study for methods of dealing with shrinking cities. As famous American boomtowns once existed, their counterparts exist today; cities such as Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo, and Pittsburgh have all lost around 50% of their population over the past 50 years. The commonality that exists is the industrial based economy, the variable being the social adaptation to industrial decline. Detroit has fared worst in terms of this variable, and the photos here illustrate that..


The photos below are a few examples of urban decay in Detroit that I recently visited, along with Seicer, Gordon Bombay, and a friend and guide from OhioUrbex. Click on the images to launch the related galleries, and head over to the Photography: Detroit section for more information, and some previews of upcoming posts!


The sheer volume of abandoned homes in Detroit is the focus of the first few galleries. Some estimates put the number of vacant homes from anywhere between 10,000 to almost 50,000. Between rampant foreclosures, demolitions, and arsons, the actual count is difficult to keep. These images show that some city blocks are completely empty, some contain a few vacant homes, and still some remain occupied amidst the backdrop of urban decay.


Abandoned houses in Detroit
Urban Meadows: The abandoned and demolished neighborhoods of Detroit, MI.
Detroit has over 10,000 vacant homes. The combination of prevalent abandonments and rampant arson has led the city to purchase entire blocks and raze them. An eerie landscape of urban infrastructure dividing overgrown meadows is all the remains in some neighborhoods, like the one this gallery depicts.


Abandoned houses against the Detroit skyline
City Streetscapes: The abandoned street and cityscapes of Detroit, MI.
Similar to the “Urban Meadows” gallery above, these shots show the stark contrast between the glitzy skyline of Detroit and the abandoned neighborhoods that surround it.


Remember to check back later this week and next week for more Detroit galleries, including Michigan Central Station (pictured at the top of this page), an abandoned police station, a church, skyscrapers, factories, warehouses, and more...
 

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