The bare truth of Detroit's deterioration is captured by perhaps the most unsentimental chronicler you can imagine: the Google Street View car.
That's the discovery of GooBing Detroit, a blog on Tumblr that began early last year as a comparison of street views from circa-2009 Google Maps and circa-2012 Bing Maps (hence the name GooBing). GooBing went dormant in July, but thelaunch of Google's Street View "time machine" a few weeks ago breathed new life into it.
The man behind GooBing Detroit, Alex Alsup, says one Detroit group's phrase "hurricane without water" is an "apt metaphor" for the city's deterioration.
What you may not have realized -- and what GooBing Detroit drives home so starkly, with very little commentary -- is just how rapidly the landscape has been crumbling.
It's not just Detroit, either, he says: "This is a question cities across the nation should be thinking about. Detroit today is your town tomorrow, as our former mayor Coleman Young said."
GooBing is a personal project of Alsup's, but he also works at Loveland Technologies, which just finished surveying all 380,000 properties in Detroit. You can see the results at MotorCityMapping.org. A few takeaways: Nearly a quarter of the properties are vacant lots. Of the remaining 264,000 properties that contain structures, nearly 15,000 are in poor condition -- about a third of them so poor that they warrant demolition. Seven thousand buildings have fire damage, and 28,000 need boarding. LINK