At least Detroit has ONE booming industry: Photographers are flocking to capture crumbling remains of once-glorious buildings


Tour guide charges $45 for a three-hour tour of some of the city's leading landmarks



Bankrupt city cannot afford the cost of demolishing around 80,000 vacant buildings



While not 100% legal, the tours have been unofficially allowed by police



They provide the sad physical evidence of Detroit's descent from a once-bustling metropolis to a city on the hardest of times. Eerily adandoned, as if the result of some global apocalypse, the buildings - from schools and factories to grand railway stations and family homes - have been quietly disintegrating as scores of residents move on to find a better life elsewhere.

Detroit has almost 80,000 vacant buildings, and the larger ones can cost more than $10,000 each to demolish. Authorities in the bankrupt city can't afford to tear them down, and have no choice but to let them rot.

But the decaying landmarks have provided the beleaguered city with at least one brisk trade - dereliction tours for photographers who have been arriving in their droves to record the city's decline.



Crumbling glory: The East Grand Boulevard Methodist Church is one of the stops on Jesse Welter's tour of derelict Detroit. He charges punters $45 for a three-hour tour

Future unknown: Michigan Central Depot train station is another on the Welter tour. Having been empty since 1988, it is a stark reminder of the economic devastation suffered by the former bustling city

Everything from newspaper articles to coffee-table books have been generated by the burgeoning industry, and it has grown from a man with a camera simply trespassing on property to well-organised paid-for tours.

The photos in this article, for example, are from a French photographers Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre.



Jesse Welter was one of the first to spy an opportunity in the growing interest in dying Detroit, and charges now $45 for a three-hour tour of such places as the Packard Automotive Plant, the East Grand Boulevard Methodist Church and the imposing Central Depot train station.

Must the show go on? The United Artists Theater in Detroit, derelict and open to the elements. Detroit has suffered economically more than any other major U.S. city

Lack of vanity: Once billed as 'Detroit's most beautiful dance rendezvous', the Vanity Ballroom can hardly make that claim today

Welter told the LA Times that he first started his tours in late 2011, ferrying around one or two people at a time in his car. But the business has really taken off recently, so much so that he is now driving around in a 12-seat van.



And each visitor has to stay somewhere while in Detroit, so the city's hotels and restaurants can thank them for adding to their coffers too.



The one catch is that the tours are not 100 per cent legal. Wriggling your way inside one of the properties - or walking in through a conveniently missing door or hole in the wall - is still considered trespassing by the police.



Safety is also an issue, and people caught in the wrong place at the wrong time can face fines up to £225. Other adventure-seekers have been assaulted, carjacked and mugged.



From the vaults: A haunting image shows the once-secure and proud Bagley-Clifford Office of the National Bank of Detroit - its vault decrepit and strong boxes strewn

Unbelievable: The Highland Park police station is the most shocking of the portraits by Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre. Mugshots litter the floor

A forlorn note: Looking more like a war zone - or an underwater shot of the Titanic - the ballroom of the Lee Plaza Hotel and its upturned grand piano is a sorry sight

In ruins: A third of the city's 140 square miles - including the Packard Motors plant, left, and William Livingston House, right - lies abandoned and derelict

A lesson from history: Jane Cooper Elementary School, already devoid of children and staff, still has some semblance of order in spring 2008

But Welter said he provides an element of protection, in that he knows the places not to go, and that police have told him that they don't mind him going into certain buildings.



There are plenty to chose from. Authorities say 85 per cent of Detroit's 142.9 square miles has 'experienced population decline' in the past decade last decade.

