Detroit’s biggest ruin – The Packard Automotive Plant is the largest abandoned industrial complex in the world

A former automobile-manufacturing factory in Detroit, Michigan, The Packard Automotive Plant was the place where luxury cars were made by the Packard Motor Car Company and later by the Studebaker-Packard Corporation.

When it opened in 1903, Packard’s Detroit plant was the most advanced auto factory in the world with skilled craftsmen involved in over eighty trades.

This massive factory complex closed in 1958, though other businesses operated on the premises or used it for storage until the late 1990s.

The 3,500,000-square-foot (325,000 m2) plant was designed by famous Michigan architect Albert Kahn Associates using Trussed Concrete Steel Company products. It is located on 40 acres (16 ha) of land on East Grand Boulevard on the city’s east side.

It included the first use of reinforced concrete in the United States for industrial construction in the automobile industry. Following World War I, during the 1920s Packard began the transition from hand assembly to an assembly line.

It was also during the 1920s that the company solidified its reputation for exceptional engineering and became known as one of the highest quality luxury vehicles produced in the United States.

Packard Plant’s building number 10 during expansion circa 1911. Source

 

The western part of the abandoned Packard Automotive Plant in Detroit, Michigan. Source

 

During World War 1, the plant helped with the war effort, assembling airplane engines. Source: Daniel Lobo/Flickr

 

Constructed along East Grand Boulevard. Source: Becky Stern/Flickr

 

A 3.5 million-square-foot complex sprawling across 35 acres. Source: Daniel Lobo/Flickr

A number of the outer buildings were in use by businesses up through the early 2000s. In 2010, the last remaining tenant, Chemical Processing, announced its intention to vacate the premises after 52 years.

Upon liquidation, the remaining pre-war Packard designs and tooling were sold to buyers around the world.

Constructed in 1903, the Detroit factory employed 40,000 at its peak before closing in 1958. Source: Rain0975/Flickr

 

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The infamous dump truck, which was unceremoniously launched out of a fourth-floor level. Source

Since its abandonment, its gaping, debris-filled spaces have drawn photographers and gawkers, scrappers, paintball games and rave parties.

In one incident, vandals pushed a dump truck from the fourth floor. Karen Nagher, the executive director of the nonprofit organization Preservation Wayne, stated that she was irked to see people come from “all over the world” to poke around Detroit. “Piece by piece, they’re disassembling those buildings, making it harder and harder to restore them”.

 

Stretching for blocks upon blocks, it feels like entering a maze. Source: Daniel Lobo/Flickr

 

The remaining pre-war Packard designs and tooling were sold to buyers around the world. Source: Daniel Lobo/Flickr

 

It also was the first industrial site in Detroit to use reinforced concrete in its construction. Source: Daniel Lobo/Flickr

Despite many years of neglect and abuse, the reinforced concrete structures remain mostly intact and structurally sound.

Portions of the upper floors of several small sections in various buildings have collapsed or been partly demolished and lay in ruins in the wake of several aborted attempts at demolition over the years.

The City of Detroit has pledged legal action to have the property demolished or secured. Dominic Cristini, whose claim of ownership is disputed, was said to be conducting construction surveys in advance of full-scale demolition as of early 2012.

On February 5, 2013, it was reported that aluminum letter placards spelling the Nazi Slogan “Arbeit macht frei” (work makes free) were placed in the windows of the E. Grand Boulevard bridge. Community volunteers promptly removed the letters.

Typical industrial buildings prior to that were constructed of steel and iron supports and were typically faced with brick with few windows. Source: Rain0975/Flickr

 

The labyrinthine plant in Detroit still stands vacant. Source: Rain0975/Flickr

 

By 2006, most tenants had vacated and the property sat abandoned. Source: Becky Stern/Flickr

Due to tax delinquency, the 43 parcels comprising the plant were put up for auction in September 2013. The starting bid was $975,000 (the amount owed in taxes) and there were no takers.

The future of the development is unclear, but the idea is to redevelop the Packard Plant as a mixed development of а residential and commercial property.