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Empty for 14 years, Detroit's Michigan Central Station has taken on a life--and a symbolism--all its own.





Detroit's 18-story Michigan Central Depot cost $15 million to build in 1913. It is on the national register of historic places but has been abandoned since the 1980s. The 21-acre site (above) is surrounded by a chain-link fence. Although the roof is badly damaged and the interior has been vandalized, many of the original details remain intact, such as the waiting-room ceiling (below).
I may have been Detroit's only urban pioneer to miss out on Michigan Central Depot. In the 1990s my friend Echoe watched fireworks from the abandoned 18-story building's rooftop. Becky danced through the cavernous interior in any number of altered states during late-night raves. Doug and Carryn photographed its deepest reaches and its most hardy inhabitants: homeless men building fires at night, graffiti artists using its solid shell as a canvas, wildlife ranging from tame dogs to rabid rodents.

Operating, as I tend to do, under the premise that things will never change, I missed it all. The building's disquieting exterior, lording over the city's near west side and visible for miles, has served as my beacon for years--an oddly comforting reminder of who and where I am. But until recently I never ventured past the once grand circular drive fronting this crown jewel of what one artist calls our city's "fabulous ruins."

This past January, when I finally did enter the building, years after it had been fenced off and the urban archaeologists had moved on to less protected pastures, it was with liability insurance, an escort, and countless caveats designed to rein in my raging curiosity. After almost two decades of dormancy, Michigan Central is allegedly back in business. In Detroit this means there's a big sign out front, some vague plans on the front page of the newspaper, and rumors emanating from neighborhood meetings at a nearby Mexican restaurant.

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In almost any other city, of course, this 1913 Beaux Arts masterpiece--designed by Warren & Wetmore and Reed & Stem, the architects of New York's Grand Central Station--would already have been redeveloped, vacated, and redeveloped again since its closing in 1988. But as much as locals like to deny it, Detroit isn't like any other city. We long for street life, denying that we live among single-family homes and backyards, not brownstones and front stoops. We demand a downtown, forgetting that every neighborhood once had its own shopping and entertainment district, easily accessed by streetcar. And as my urban-planning professors were fond of pointing out, we insist on building Detroit "back up," overlooking that significant portions of this 140-square-mile city were never developed in the first place. To wit, the upper stories of Michigan Central remained vacant for all 75 years that the building was open.


 

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