Abandoned Factories in America That Give Us the Creeps
Industrial Wasteland
Times change, and there's no greater reminder than the remnants of industries that once were. Some were rendered obsolete by new technology and others simply couldn't keep up in economic downturns, leaving entire communities devastated by the loss of a single company. Often outdated factories get demolished or replaced, but in some cities and towns, the husks of old factories remain as eerie reminders of a time that couldn't last. Here are some abandoned factories you can still see across the country — and what they were like in their heydays.
Wyman-Gordon Power Plant: Then
Dixmoor, Illinois
Wyman-Gordon bought the Ingalls-Shepard Forging steel plant in 1920 and went on growing with the aviation industry. In the constricting market of 1986, the company decided to focus on aerospace and shut down this plant making diesel-engine crankshafts for heavy equipment manufacturers such as Caterpillar and Deere.
Wyman-Gordon Power Plant: Now
Many of the surrounding buildings were demolished, but the power plant still stands. After a century of paving forests to make room for industry, nature may have the last laugh as it grows back in thickly around the decaying structure.
Indiana Army Ammunition Plant: Then
Charlestown, Indiana
DuPont won a military contract by promising to produce 600,000 pounds of "smokeless powder" daily for allied use in World War II, and a sprawling plant to do it went up fast — built from September 1940 to June 1941. It went dark after V-J Day in 1945, but reopened to supply the military for the Korean and Vietnam wars.
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Indiana Army Ammunition Plant: Now
Charlestown, Indiana
INAAP is now a ghost of the war efforts, with rusted-over coal hoppers and chipped transformers. Foliage grows over the buildings, up the smokestacks, going as far as to break up the concrete ground and pull apart the bricks. Demolition and construction is expected to take place slowly at the site — two decades' worth of work, costing $315 million.
Portland Cement Plant: Then
Le Hunt, Kansas
The Alma Cementworks, opened on Table Mound in 1905 to turn limestone deposits into concrete, thrived as a company town with future silent film star Tom Mix as sheriff until competition helped shut it down for good in 1918.
Portland Cement Plant: Now
For a 117-year-old plant, it's amazing so much of the structure remains, and people sometimes visit despite (or because of) rumors of a ghost dog that howls, and to look for the place a laborer named Bohr (or Boars) died in the walls, his pickaxe and shovel left there with him.
Sunflower Ordnance Works: Then
De Soto, Kansas
Opened early in U.S. involvement in World War II, the Sunflower Ordnance Works brought a lot of jobs, and families with them, to De Soto. Sunflower produced gear for many of America's wars until it closed in the early 1990s. Cleanup efforts have been dragging on ever since.
Sunflower Ordnance Works: Now
Only some storage bunkers and a power station remain on the plant's 9,000-plus acres. Signs for a smoking area serve as reminders of a time when people not only smoked liberally, but thought nothing of smoking while working around explosives.
Fisher Body Plant 21: Then
Detroit
The Fisher family made a name for itself along with carriages for horses and automobiles in the early 1900s, though the company sold to General Motors in 1926. GM closed this plant in 1984, with the space getting a brief resurrection as a paint plant from 1990 to 1994.
Fisher Body Plant 21: Now
The Environmental Protection Agency declared the 536,000-square-foot, six-story space contaminated in 2004 and only recently completed a cleanup begun in 2008. Plans for apartments and retail spaces are set to begin in 2023.
Buick City: Then
Flint, Michigan
Flint has suffered the loss of a lot of industry. Buick thrived in Flint until the 1980s. Even during the layoffs, GM invested $300 million in Buick City, a roughly 400-acre complex made up of six factories, but ultimately shut the complex down in 1999.
Buick City: Now
Buick City has been mostly abandoned for 20 years, as a trust has tried to fill the vacancies. Lear has moved into one corner, but 2013 plans to welcome American Cast Iron Pipe haven't happened, and a high reading of chemicals in groundwater in 2018 has prohibited further sales. Ashley Capital now has the property under sale for "industrial redevelopment."
Satsop Nuclear Plant: Then
Elma, Washington
Washington State invested in nuclear power in the 1970s but got in over its head. By 1983 it couldn't afford to finish its five proposed nuclear power stations — only one was completed and another stopped mid-construction.
Satsop Nuclear Plant: Now
The towers avoided demolition in 1995, and one was converted into a business park, leaving the other hauntingly lonely. Construction was completed on the stairs up the cooling towers, which has allowed explorers to peer inside. Instead of a reactor, trees have blossomed. Even when films such as "Transformers: The Last Knight" film there, Satstop is a stirring monument to what might have been.
Republic Rubber: Then
Youngstown, Ohio
After surviving one closing in the 1970s, this factory making tires and hoses closed permanently in 1989.
Republic Rubber: Now
Collapsed buildings and debris includes piles of tires that may have been made on site. A visit from the Malvern Exploration & Paranormal Society in 2017 found it to be "very unsafe and dangerous. The buildings were crumbling and the remains of demolished buildings included rubble and holes in the ground."
Dixie Cup Plant: Then
Wilson Borough, Pennsylvania
It takes a big factory to make little cups. Dixie Cup moved from New York to Pennsylvania because it needed more space to make enough product to meet demand. Even after Dixie Cup closed here in the 1980s, the building continued to lease to a logistics company until 2007.
Dixie Cup Plant: Now
A giant Dixie Cup still rests atop the abandoned building, rusty and empty of the 40,000 gallons of water it once held. The owner hoped to turn the building into 128,000 square feet of offices and 334 apartments, an $80 million project that would have included $4 million just to fix 100,000 square feet of shattered windows. The building is now about to be bought by real estate developer Nick Tsapatsaris, though $400,000 in back taxes need to be cleared before the new owner can proceed with plans to restore the building and convert it into an industrial arts facility/ last mile logistics facility.
Portland Cement Plant: Then
San Antonio
Cement was big business in Texas, and San Antonio used to have a whole Cementville of plants. Cementville was demolished in 1980 to make room for a shopping center, so ruins of the original Portland Cement Plant in San Antonio — Alamo Cement moved from this plant after 1907 — are all that's left of the industry.
Portland Cement Plant: Now
Buildings are occupied only by abandoned equipment and vegetation, as people are barred from stepping inside this neighborhood of stone that once built the city of Austin — but it's a historical landmark that welcomes visitors with commemorative plaques.
Tintic Reduction Mill: Then
Genova, Utah
This silver processing mill lasted only four years, built into a hill so gravity could help reduce sulfides in raw ore, but by 1925 the process was obsolete.
Tintic Reduction Mill: Now
The empty tanks and remnants of machinery suggest the Silver Rush that never came. While it is haunting to see such a sprawling complex lay dormant, lead and arsenic contamination make it off-limits to tourists. Taggers have marked their territory over the years, but a barbed wire fence now makes that more difficult.
This article was originally published on Cheapism