Some buildings around my hometown:
This was a gas station owned and operated by a close friend of the family.
This was another gas station built in the 1940s and only lasted until 1970 when they built the interstate the locale of this place moved a couple miles down the road right off the interstate. Its called BETO Junction.
Some old one room school house along highway 31, the roof has obviously been redone so I assume it is being used as storage by whoever owns it now:
And this, is the urban explorers wet dream.... This building I have been inside before back in 2004, however I lost all the pictures I took and have not managed to get back inside since due to it being right off the main highway and police do watch the area for trespassers. There is ways onto the site though, that require miles of walking through forests and fields, which is how I got this shot. After the wildlife I encountered on my last trip, I decided its better not to take this venture alone.
This was the Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant. Nearly 15 square miles of over 1,000 abandoned buildings and over 140 miles of roads. The site is nothing short of the biggest abandonment in America, being the size of a small city. From 1942-1998 the site was owned by the department of defense and operated by Hercules Aerospace to manufacture and TEST ammunition for the military including bombs. It was the largest ammunition plant in America and the first to produce many types of ammunition.
In 1998 it was shut down for good and pending to being put an EPA cleanup list that never happened and was deemed military excess and in 2006 the land was handed over to a private developer for cleanup whom was given $109 million to do so. Within a year, the developer only managed to demolish less than half the buildings (originally over 2,200 buildings) and in 2008 the money ran dry and so it sits. There is no actual security on grounds anymore, but there is still small activity from the developer within the main north entrance buildings. The rest of the 10,000 acres has been leased out as farmland for pastures. But nature has certainly reclaimed the area in a hurry. Here are a few pictures (most taken with my cell phone) that show just how much of the outer roads are left: