Perhaps, this should have gone in the Buildings & Architecture forum, but I thought this was a must see. Below are photos taken by
SOUTHEN (
http://www.flickr.com/photos/southen/), one of the best amateur photographers of Detroit's derelict buildings you'll find out there these days. He recently did a photo of Detroit's abandoned United Artist Theater, once one of downtown Detroit's largest and most grand cinemas, that I had to share. The state and story of the United Artists represents, perfectly, one of the far extremes of Detroit, and the stereotypical images that come to the minds of most Americans when they hear "Detroit." In this case "bombed out" would be an apt description to say the least. The theatre and adjoining office tower are currently, for the first time in years, seriously be marketed for redevelopment, or if they can't find someone to take the project on, demolition.
Some background...
The United Artists Theater was built primarily for cinema (though, it also staged sporadic theater shows) in the heart of Detroit's Necklace District in 1927. The C. Howard Crane-designed, Spanish Gothic-styled theater and office tower opened on February 3rd, 1928. It contained 2,070 seats and the complex costed $1.2 million, at the time. The office tower was built in case the theater flopped.
As with most many downtowns at the time, downtown Detroit began to decline in the 1960's, and the cinema showed porno in its last years before closing in 1971. All of the theaters assets were sold off in 1975 and it was shuttered for good. The office tower remained viable, though, until the 1984 when downtown was at its worst, and it too, was shuttered.
Both have suffered SIGNIFICANT neglect sense then having been owned by Mike Ilitch of Little Cesars fame (or infamy). Again, as of 2006, the building and theater are actively being marketed for reuse or demolition.
The pictures (slightly retouched):
This is some real, bleak-future, Phantom of the Opera remake schitt.
Exterior:

UrbanTiki -
http://www.flickr.com/photos/urbantiki/

tomcampion -
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tomcampion/