Infiltration
THEORY
Ethics
Observations
 
PRACTICE
Abandoned Sites
Boats
Churches
Drains/Catacombs
Hotels/Hospitals
Transit Tunnels
Utility Tunnels
Various
 
RESOURCES
Exploration Timeline
Infilnews
Infilspeak Dictionary
Usufruct Blog
Worldwide Links
Infiltration Forums home | search | login | register

Reply
Infiltration Forums > US: Great Lakes > Suburban blight(Viewed 2296 times)
orgullo gringo   |  | 
Suburban blight
< on 4/20/2014 5:20 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Admist the sprawl of these booming suburban communities there is blight. Where strip malls and housing complexes stand now was once farmland. It seems a growing number of these old farm houses have become abandoned, seemingly swallowed up by the growth around them. The juxtaposition is amazing, a 100 year old farm house that is falling apart right next to hundreds of brand new homes. I wonder what this landscape looked like a few decades ago. It's easy to picture abandonment in communities with a shrinking population, but the houses pictured here are in suburbs of Indianapolis which in the last decades have had a skyrocketing population (many have seen over 100% growth in the last ten years).
1.


2.


3.


4.


5.


6.


7.


8.


9.


10.


11.


12.


13.


14.


15.


16.


17.


18.


19.


20.





[last edit 4/20/2014 5:59 PM by orgullo gringo - edited 1 times]

cdevon location:
west county
 
 |  |  | cdevon1200
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 1 on 4/20/2014 9:43 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
I want those stairs!



When I say I'm 'clean and sober', it means I've showered and I'm headed to the liquor store.
DawnPatrol   |  |  | Flickr
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 2 on 4/20/2014 10:07 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Some beautiful houses! ...minus 17, that looks dumb as hell :p It's always fun to look at these kind of areas on google earth's history and see how the land has developed. Nice set!



crows location:
Eastern Iowa
 
 |  |  | AIM Message
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 3 on 4/21/2014 1:48 AM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Gah! Sad piano!

The stairs are awesome. cdevon is right.

And those houses were not as old as I was expecting or derelict looking on the outside as I was expecting when I read your description! Most of the old abandoned farmhouses in my area are pretty gutted by the elements at this point. Lovely set though, if sad story.

(I was driving around with my partner the other day, staring off the highway at a giant suburban development going... who wants to live in these places? Expensive condos all crammed together like that, but still miles away from where there's anything to do. So you have to have a car, and you don't get your privacy...)



input: bacon | output: fiction
Th3 Heretic location:
Ohio
 
 |  | 
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 4 on 4/21/2014 2:12 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Gorgeous pictures! I need to really start getting out there I have a nice list going I just need to find the time....



"The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over." - Hunter S. Thompson
iliamo1986 location:
Central Iowa
 
 |  | 
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 5 on 4/21/2014 3:41 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by DawnPatrol
Some beautiful houses! ...minus 17, that looks dumb as hell :p It's always fun to look at these kind of areas on google earth's history and see how the land has developed. Nice set!


Looks like the section with the metal siding was a poorly-conceived addition. If I can tell what was added on, you're doing it wrong, people. :p



"The destruction of the past is perhaps the greatest of all crimes." -Simone Weil
DawnPatrol   |  |  | Flickr
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 6 on 4/21/2014 3:44 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
^very poor indeed. It looks like they just dropped one building on top of another.



climb_something location:
Mpls
 
 |  | 
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 7 on 4/21/2014 4:54 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Who's Alto?



orgullo gringo   |  | 
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 8 on 4/21/2014 6:16 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by crows
Gah! Sad piano!

The stairs are awesome. cdevon is right.

And those houses were not as old as I was expecting or derelict looking on the outside as I was expecting when I read your description! Most of the old abandoned farmhouses in my area are pretty gutted by the elements at this point. Lovely set though, if sad story.

(I was driving around with my partner the other day, staring off the highway at a giant suburban development going... who wants to live in these places? Expensive condos all crammed together like that, but still miles away from where there's anything to do. So you have to have a car, and you don't get your privacy...)


Some of these were recently abandoned. #18 they were in the middle of remodelling and then left all kinds of stuff behind. There's no way I would want to live in one of these suburbs and have no access to public transportation and have drive everywhere in the terrible traffic. I would rather live in one of these old houses that has some character than a brand new house that looks the same as everyone else's. Several decades from now these suburban towns that have seen explosive growth could just as easily see a sharp decline. These brand new cookie cutter houses could be sites for urban exploration in decades to come.



Bulljager   |  | 
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 9 on 4/24/2014 9:45 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote


nice pics thanks!!


that maroon chair looks comfy with a great view !!!



Skye_Ann location:
Kitchener, Ontario
 
 |  |  | History In Decay Blog
Re: Suburban blight
<Reply # 10 on 4/27/2014 2:08 AM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
That last wooden staircase photo is so cool!



My Blog; https://historyindecay.blogspot.com/
Infiltration Forums > US: Great Lakes > Suburban blight(Viewed 2296 times)
Reply

Add a poll to this thread



This thread is currently Public. Anyone, including search engines, may see it.

Powered by AvBoard AvBoard version 1.5 alpha
Page Generated In: 125 ms