These eerie pictures of Detroit's ruined landmarks are really suggestive of a post-apocalyptic landscape, utterly abandoned by man. Scrolling through them one is almost shocked to recall that millions of people still live there...
A new book called Ruins of Detroit displays Detroit's downtown landmarks in decay: Abandoned hotels, houses and schools line the streets as a reminder of the city's economic downfall over the past century. The devastation takes on an eerie beauty, as captured by Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre.
The photographs show once-lively structures of an American city, now remembered by its remains.
While Detroit's official unemployment rate has rebounded to 12 percent from a high of 15.7 percent in October of 2009, the state's economy is nowhere near healed. As the Wall Street Journal recently pointed out, the state's jobless rate is falling at the fastest pace in the nation -- but that doesn't equate to job growth. A state agency told the WSJ the decline "primarily reflected a reduction in the number of unemployed individuals seeking jobs."
The entire collection of photos can be found in the Ruins of Detroit book, or at Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre Photography
Take a look at the ruins of this city:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/26/detroit-decline_n_813696.html#218521
A new book called Ruins of Detroit displays Detroit's downtown landmarks in decay: Abandoned hotels, houses and schools line the streets as a reminder of the city's economic downfall over the past century. The devastation takes on an eerie beauty, as captured by Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre.
The photographs show once-lively structures of an American city, now remembered by its remains.
While Detroit's official unemployment rate has rebounded to 12 percent from a high of 15.7 percent in October of 2009, the state's economy is nowhere near healed. As the Wall Street Journal recently pointed out, the state's jobless rate is falling at the fastest pace in the nation -- but that doesn't equate to job growth. A state agency told the WSJ the decline "primarily reflected a reduction in the number of unemployed individuals seeking jobs."
The entire collection of photos can be found in the Ruins of Detroit book, or at Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre Photography
Take a look at the ruins of this city:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/26/detroit-decline_n_813696.html#218521