I recently took a new job for what I'm told is the second largest apartment complex in the US. Over 1700 units total, with over 1500 vacant, abandoned, damaged, etc. I wasn't prepared for the enormity of the complex, it's literally a small town.
The complex used to be one of the worst sections of Columbus, Ohio, known for drug manufacturing, sales and usage, prostitution, theft, robbery, home invasions, murder.
In 2004, an arsonist torched one of the buildings, burning it to the ground, killing a family of ten Mexican immigrants and leaving between 50 and 60 others homeless and possession free.
There are apartments that haven't been secured and weather, animals, homeless people, etc have been in and out of them over the past several years. The current owners are trying to turn the property around. There hasn't been a reported crime on the property for months and we are slowly restoring apartments to livable conditions.
I've been driving around at lunch, taking some pics of the outsides of buildings, and as I go into vacant units, I'll take pics of some of the more interesting ones and update this thread.
First, an aerial shot of the property (outlined in red). I pulled this from Google Earth, and it's at least 4 years out of date. Today, there are hardly any cars on the property at all (not that you can reaally see them in this shot. Those black dots on the freeway are cars, just to give you an idea of size), and a building in the orange outlined area is gone, burned to the ground in the aforementioned arson.
I've highlighted and enlarged a few areas that I find interesting, they draw me when I'm on the property for some reason.
This is the courtyard where the building was burned to the ground before the fire happened.
And after a year or two (You can see the shrine the victim's family and friends started):
And today:
This is the shrine to the victims of the arson fire. It is approximately where the unit the family lived in was located. No one was ever caught or charged in the fire. The shrine is still being maintained by relatives and friends of the victims. This section of the complex is pretty much chained off, you have to thread a maze to get to it with a car.
one of the remaining buildings ion this courtyard:
This is the tennis court in the blue outlined area (this entire section is chained off and you have to walk into it):
over 4 years ago:
Today:
At the bottom of the tennis courts is a small laundry building, you can see it in the aerial shot. This is the same building and part of the HUGE pile of fallen trees and other brush in the parking lot in front of it today:
The complex used to be one of the worst sections of Columbus, Ohio, known for drug manufacturing, sales and usage, prostitution, theft, robbery, home invasions, murder.
In 2004, an arsonist torched one of the buildings, burning it to the ground, killing a family of ten Mexican immigrants and leaving between 50 and 60 others homeless and possession free.
There are apartments that haven't been secured and weather, animals, homeless people, etc have been in and out of them over the past several years. The current owners are trying to turn the property around. There hasn't been a reported crime on the property for months and we are slowly restoring apartments to livable conditions.
I've been driving around at lunch, taking some pics of the outsides of buildings, and as I go into vacant units, I'll take pics of some of the more interesting ones and update this thread.
First, an aerial shot of the property (outlined in red). I pulled this from Google Earth, and it's at least 4 years out of date. Today, there are hardly any cars on the property at all (not that you can reaally see them in this shot. Those black dots on the freeway are cars, just to give you an idea of size), and a building in the orange outlined area is gone, burned to the ground in the aforementioned arson.
I've highlighted and enlarged a few areas that I find interesting, they draw me when I'm on the property for some reason.
This is the courtyard where the building was burned to the ground before the fire happened.
And after a year or two (You can see the shrine the victim's family and friends started):
And today:
This is the shrine to the victims of the arson fire. It is approximately where the unit the family lived in was located. No one was ever caught or charged in the fire. The shrine is still being maintained by relatives and friends of the victims. This section of the complex is pretty much chained off, you have to thread a maze to get to it with a car.
one of the remaining buildings ion this courtyard:
This is the tennis court in the blue outlined area (this entire section is chained off and you have to walk into it):
over 4 years ago:
Today:
At the bottom of the tennis courts is a small laundry building, you can see it in the aerial shot. This is the same building and part of the HUGE pile of fallen trees and other brush in the parking lot in front of it today:
Comment