Abandoned Fisher Body Plant 21 – Detroit
The Abandoned Fisher Body Plant 21 stands beside one of Detroit’s busiest freeway junctions, looming over the I-75 and I-94 interchange. For decades, it was a working factory that played a real role in the city’s automotive story, long before it became known for its empty windows and decaying concrete.
Construction on the plant wrapped up in 1919, during a period when Detroit’s auto industry was expanding at a pace that demanded massive production space. Fisher Body Company specialized in manufacturing vehicle bodies rather than complete cars, supplying major automakers that were racing to keep up with demand. Plant numbers were used to organize their growing network of factories, and this building was simply assigned 21 in that lineup.
By the mid-1920s, Fisher Body was operating under the General Motors umbrella, and Plant 21 continued producing vehicle bodies for years after. Over time, the work done inside the building shifted. It wasn’t limited to passenger cars — the plant also handled specialty vehicles like buses, ambulances, and limousines. During World War II, production adjusted again, contributing to materials and components tied to the war effort.
As newer, more efficient facilities came online elsewhere, older plants like this one struggled to remain useful. By the late 1970s, Plant 21 was clearly showing its age. Manufacturing operations ended in 1984, closing the door on more than six decades of industrial use. The building didn’t go silent immediately, though. Portions were later occupied by industrial coating and paint operations, giving it a short-lived second purpose.
That final activity didn’t last. By the early 1990s, those businesses were gone, and by 1993 the building was empty. Years passed with no real direction for the site. The city eventually took ownership in 2000, but the size of the structure and the condition it was in made progress slow.
I explored the building in 2013, when it was still fully abandoned. Inside, the scale was overwhelming — wide floors, long stretches of empty space, and the kind of wear that only decades of use followed by neglect can leave behind. It felt less like a single building and more like a forgotten industrial district contained under one roof.
After sitting unused for so long, the plant eventually entered another phase of its life. Cleanup efforts began years later, followed by plans aimed at reuse instead of demolition, marking the first real shift away from abandonment.
Fisher Body Plant 21’s story follows a familiar pattern seen across Detroit — rapid growth, a slow decline, and a long period of uncertainty. Whether remembered for what it produced or for what it became afterward, it remains one of the city’s most recognizable industrial landmarks.