If you got all your information about Detroit from the blogosphere, the mainstream media, or the photography section of your local bookstore and never actually visited the Motor City, you could be forgiven for assuming that it’s one giant, bombed-out wasteland. That’s certainly the impression conveyed by many of the artists who have been criss-crossing the city over the last few years, lovingly documenting all of the city’s abandoned factories, houses, schools, and train stations.

As a Michigan native and as one of the people who helped to plan the launch of Xconomy Detroit, I want to lodge a plea: Enough already.

At Xconomy, our focus is on the technology-related enterprises working to ensure a prosperous, sustainable future for Detroit and our other home cities of Boston, San Diego, and Seattle. That doesn’t mean we wear blinders: we know that conditions are desperate in southeast Michigan, and unemployment is out of control. It will be a long time before the region finds a set of new industries and employers who can bring back anything resembling the auto industry’s halcyon days from the mid-20th century.

But that’s exactly why we think the public discussion about Detroit needs to look forward. If people can focus on innovation rather than decay, renewal rather than ruins, they might just have a better chance of creating something of value.

I’m not denying that many photos of derelict structures in Detroit have a haunting allure. The crumbling plaster, peeling paint, and scattered furnishings in these emptied-out buildings lend a sort of texture and poignance that you certainly don’t get from images of more modern architecture, or even from old pictures of these same Detroit landmarks when they were new.

But I would argue that the texture in these photos is only skin-deep. What messages are the creators of these images really trying to convey? Often, it seems to be little more than a kind of wistfulness, sometimes tinged with schadenfreude. It’s just so sad that the city that was once the fourth most populous in the United States is now pervaded by emptiness. It’s so shocking what kind of neglect can set in when the bottom falls out of a region’s economy. It’s so ironic that the sort of decay and destruction you might expect to see in Sarajevo or the former East Germany can be found in the heart of an American city. Like drivers who gawk at an accident on the highway, we can’t avert our gaze.

Well, you know what? You can find empty, abandoned structures in virtually every city in the U.S., not to mention the country’s vast rural stretches. Abandonment isn’t always the sign of a civilization’s collapse. Sometimes it just means that people picked up and left in a hurry. The only real message you can take from these images is that the real estate these buildings stand on isn’t yet valuable enough to warrant redevelopment.

In the end, most of the images of Detroit’s abandoned structures have a fetishistic, ultimately unsatisfying quality. They are the industrial equivalent of necrophilia.

I can’t show you the actual photographs of Detroit’s so-called ruins here, since most of them are copyrighted, but you can find them pretty easily online. A pair of French photographers, Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre, are among the leading perpetrators—Time Magazine thought their work significant enough to put a whole slideshow online. Then there’s … Next Page »

Wade Roush is a freelance science and technology journalist and the producer and host of the podcast Soonish. Follow @soonishpodcast

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