Home > Recreation > Outdoors > Urban Exploration > North America > United States > Michigan
Sites about urban exploration and groups located in Michigan.
http://members.tripod.com/~hipsterdoofus1026/Amtrak.html
Photographs were taken in April, 2000 of an abandoned railroad station in the Corktown section of Detroit, Michigan.
http://www.alliedpaper.org/
Photographic tours of, and information on a large abandoned paper factory in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
http://www.buildingsofdetroit.com/
A non-profit website dedicated to showing you the buildings that make up the city of Detroit.
http://bc.multics.org/ue/
A page about the Packard Plant.
http://www.flickr.com/groups/abandoned_in_detroit/
A fashion showcase for Detroit area designers which is set in abandoned buildings around Detroit.
http://www.flickr.com/groups/vanisheddetroit/
More than almost any other US city, Detroit is being transformed. Both by decay and by regeneration.
http://www.forgottendetroit.com/
A study of several historically significant abandoned buildings in Detroit, Michigan. Including historical material and recent interior and exterior photographs.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/urbexresearchteam/
Group for active explorers in the Michigan, US, area.
http://www.wacots.org/tiki-index.php?page=Northville+Tunnels
Photos, maps and stories with film and video. Active forum for registered members.
http://www.seedetroit.com/
Detroit (US) and its urban decay, complete with infiltration pictures.
http://www.dkpdetroit.com/bc/
Personal site with pictures, detailed descriptions and links relating to the abandoned Detroit hotel.
http://detroityes.com/
A tour through the vanishing buildings of Detroit by Lowell Boileau. Includes forum, and photographs of industrial heritage still standing and being blown up.
http://detroityes.com/home.htm
Guide through the vanishing ruins of Detroit.
http://www.visarg.com/
Collection of urban decay photographs from two Detroit artists.
Home > Recreation > Outdoors > Urban Exploration > North America > United States > Michigan
Thanks to DMOZ, which built a great web directory for nearly two decades and freely shared it with the web. About us