City Eyes Blog City Eyes in Writing

10Sep/093

Gary Homes

I'm so backlogged. I have a ton of photos to post before and after this, but I figured since I'm sitting around doing nothing I'd share a set with you guys.

This particular set consists of a day that we spent primarily exploring a residential area in Gary that is largely abandoned. The place used to be full of incredibly wealthy people and the buildings reflect that. There's nothing under two stories on the block and one of the two houses that we checked out felt like a model home to show off retro technology.

First house was pretty much stripped bare. It looks like whoever owned the house had planned on renovating it at one point, but never got around with it. We could tell that the house was ancient by the method in which the walls were built.

It was a three story house that I unfortunately took no exteriors of. The interior on the bottom two floors was shrouded in complete darkness, so I took most of my photos in the upper story.

This particular photo was taken immediately after I ascended the stairs. They were surprisingly sturdy given the shape of the entire house and the wood banister alongside the steps barely gave even as I leaned on it a bit for balance.

Lit Stairs

The attic was impressive. Well lit, and the walls were just insane. The place wasn't even that dirty.

Attic

This photo came out ridiculously well given the perceived lighting in the room. Since I went from such a bright room to this room, I had no idea that any photo that I took would turn out successfully. The odd angle at which the light came into the room under the planked up window really ended up working well for this one. The photo looks insane, but it was barely edited from my camera to how you see it here. The blobs on the walls are created by water damage I assume.

Crazy Room

We left one home and figured out a way into the second. Since they were right next to each other it was a pretty quick trek, although a few of the group and myself became lost in some of the tall weeds and had a bit of trouble finding the entrance to the damn place. Eventually we found an external stairway leading to an open basement door.

The basement was dark, but full of character. We could tell this place was going to be interesting already. Interesting side note: today was the day that I figured out that an animal can become mummified completely naturally in the dry basement of an abandoned building. There was a possum corpse on the floor that a friend of mine accidentally shuffled into. It sounded like paper mache as it slid across the floor. Unfortunately, it was a bit too dark to document.

Two variations of the basement - one underexposed to emphasize the "pi door".

Pi Door Lit

The Pi Door

We made our way upstairs and were greeted to a kitchen that would send any retro-fiend into fits of kitsch-induced bliss. Unfortunately, it was a dark kitchen with very little space to set up a tripod. In-counter stovetops, a retro clock built right into the wall, turquoise colors everywhere - the cupboards were actually still stocked with all sorts of old foods. It was crazy.

We moved out of that room and into another. Apparently the study as a bookshelf was built into the wall. The room was interesting, but full of other people trying to get a photo, so I just skipped it and moved to the entryway. The hallway was beautiful, with a curved ceiling and some pretty awesome push-button power switches.

The Hall

We wandered around a bit more before finding another interesting aspect of the house - a stairway leading to a completely planked over top floor. From what I can tell, it seems as if the owner came upon hard times and ended up leasing the complete top story to a guest. Luckily, we didn't have to do any of the dirty work as someone else had busted through the floor before us. I took the opportunity to take a photo of my friend awkwardly making his way up the stairs and through the hole.

Look Who's Popping In

That's it for now! I hope to get back to a few of these places soon because they were really intriguing to me.

See more of my abandoned photos on my main site: http://www.cityeyesphoto.com/index.php?x=browse&category=29

Share this story:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Reddit
  • TwitThis
Comments (3) Trackbacks (0)
  1. I love y’alls work! My Boyfriend and I have been wanthing to do this for a while now and I was wanting to ask you a few questions. Could you email me?
    Mananda3364@aol.com

  2. I loved all the Gary pictures! Thanks!

  3. I love abandonded buildings… I swear I have an obsession with them… Great shots they make me want to go exploring!


Leave a comment


No trackbacks yet.