Tag Archives: local artist

the no name churches

hi guys so I have been slacking on updating this with new posts and I am sorry. I broke my phone and the transition of pictures have been a little rough. I recently made friends with a Detroit Urbex god (well in my book at least) so these two churches are from my adventure with him. I can’t wait to share them with you. Enjoy xo.

 

Since I’m doing a church themed post I might as well throw in one of personal favorites. This one is named St. Margaret Mary and consists of a school as well. It was built in 1930 and was closed in 2012 due to the decline of the neighborhood and a terrible vandalism incident. My camera died in the middle of this one, not that there is much to see, but my lack of pictures has me very disappointed. I plan on going back soon.

Calvary Presbyterian Church

Calvary Presbyterian Church was built in 1916 on the corner of Grand River. It continued to grow over the years and eventually expanded the church to include a kitchen, Sunday school and offices in 1932. During the 1940s the church reached its peak of parishioners at 1,700. The population remained steady from 1950s and 1960s at about 1,500 parishioners. The church is located near the site of the famous 1967 race riots which caused the area around the church to change dramatically. After the riots, the population started leaving and moving to the suburbs, which the church decided it needed to do too. The church moved its ministry off of 8 Mile in 1991.

Calvary Presbyterian Church then became The Abundant Life Christian Center.  The Abundant Life Christian Center operated the building for a about a decade before moving to a new home in Redford.  After Abundant Life Christian Center moved out,  Greater Faith for Deliverance Church moved in.

Greater Faith for Deliverance Church occupied the location until 2009, when a fire broke out and caused heavy smoke and water damage.  While the congregation waited for insurance money to come through to fix the building, scrappers took over and cleared the building of pipes and anything else they deemed something with a monetary value. The Greater Faith for Deliverance Church has been abandoned since 2009.

 

United Community Hospital

Okay so my friend from out of town has been here the past week which means there was a lot of exploring happening and I cannot wait to share the pictures with you. This exploration is one that I have done many times because of how interesting I think it is. This hospital was designed and built because of a need to merge four other minority hospitals together. Yes, this hospital was a segregated hospital built in the early 1970s. It was built so that African Americans, Hispanics, and Arabic people could go to people of their race to get treatment. Now part of the reason the hospital had so many money problems is because they agreed to see any patient, no matter if they could pay and were insured or not.

The hospital started in trouble and ended in trouble. Within years of opening, the hospital was already in debt and having difficulty attracting new patients. This caused a filing for bankruptcy in 1991. In 1997, the hospital reopened and changed names from the Southwest Detroit Hospital to the United Community Hospital. It was reopened by Harley Brown, who was an owner of a health care company. He and other investors spent more than $8 million dollars trying to fix the hospital. However, money problems got the best of it again and the hospital was shut down in 2006 with Brown being investigated for fraud. I just read that apparently he and the city are working together to fix it up and again and re purpose it, but who knows. The guy is notorious for being a crook, just google his name and see what pops up. Supposedly plans will be released in March. I will keep you guys posted. Until then, here is what I have to show you. Some of these pictures date back a few years.

Eastown’s final show

Alright guys so as promised here are some of the pictures of Eastown before the demolition really started. I plan on going out there again today and update you with more in the next coming days. If you are just now finding my site, I went into the history behind Eastown a few posts earlier if you want to read up. The summary version would be that this old theatre was home to a very legendary rock n roll history that included acts by MC5, The Amboy Dukes, Muddy Water, Howlin’ Wolf, Grand Funk Railroad, Alice Cooper, BB King, the Steve Miller Band, Sly and the Family Stone, Bob Seger, Jefferson Airplane, The Stooges, Chuck Berry, Rod Steward, Joe Cocker, John Mayall, Taj Mahal, Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull, Dr. John, Leon Russell, Ted Nugent, Fleetwood Mac, Procol Harum, Edgar Winter, Elton John, Van Morrison, The Kinks, Captain Beefheart, J. Geils Band, The Allman Brothers, Emerson, Lake and Palmer, Buddy Miles, Humble Pie, The Doors, and The Grateful Dead. The lineups are literally insane.

Side note: I have just recently discovered pictures of this back hallway that was filled with 1970s graffiti and it has to be the coolest thing I have ever seen. I was only lucky enough to see a small amount of it but I really want you to see it so I did some research and this is the best website I found that showed some of it. This also shows the Eastown intact way more then I have ever seen it.

http://motownmuscle.com/forums/showthread.php?120731-Detroit-s-Eastown-Theatre-Music-hall

 

 

 

 

 

 

Now onto a lighter note, some of the graffiti I was lucky enough to see. Pretty sure this was the floor that all the drugs were sold on:

 

 

 

 

Lee Plaza

I am so happy I started this blog for the simple fact that I feel like I have somewhere to go to vent and lose myself without the judgement of people I know. I am having way too many feelings this morning about what is going on in my life so I really just need to sit here and be lost with you all for a few moments.

The seventeen story structure was constructed in the late 1920s. It was Ralph T. Lee’s crowning jewel of his real estate empire he built from scratch. It was designed by Charles Noble who was a very prominent architect at that time. Lee wanted the apartment building to look like something out of New York. And trust me when I tell you that it does. It is absolutely huge. You can see it when your driving at least a mile away. The roof was originally made of Spanish tile, but that was later replaced with a green copper roof. This was sadly taken by scrappers many years ago. It was the tallest building of its time so when the sunset there would be a very bright light on the roof that could be seen for miles. Picture a Great Gatsby style thing if you get what I am saying; the light was a sign of extreme wealth.

And then it all went to hell. Lee lost everything and became default on the building. He actually ended up dying eight years before the whole dispute was even settled.  It ended up being turned into a hotel which would barely stay afloat until a developer bought it in the 1960s, fixed it up, and sold it to the city. It then became low-income housing for senior citizens. This was the last attempt to revive it. It was finally closed in 1997. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 5, 1981. It will most likely never be open again due to the severe vandalism that has happened.

Doing the research on this one was very interesting and much of it I didn’t know. That’s why this is so awesome. I hope you enjoy the pictures and I hope you all have a great weekend.

*UPDATE 10/18/17*

So I completely changed the photos that go with this blog as the ones that were originally on here were complete bullshit, amateur stuff. Also, the Lee Plaza still looks like this (from the outside at least). I haven’t been in this one in a few years because there have been talks about it being restored. That owner has completely back tracked his plan and it is now slated to be sold to the City of Detroit to be a redevelopment project. We will see what ends up happening. Enjoy the updated photos xoxo