From Inside the CCIC

Photos: Before the Redevelopment

In just a few short weeks, the CCIC will launch its much talked-about redevelopment plan targeting the building's vacant southern tip. This part of the CCIC--more than 120,000 square feet of vacant and condemned warehouse--is the oldest portion of the building, constructed in the early 1920s by Louis Schwitzer, automobile engineer and racing royalty. For decades, this space was bustling with activity, with hundreds of employees producing cooling fans, super chargers, rubber seals, and more on the factory's expansive floor. Today, the space is dark and quiet. The roof has holes, broken glass litters the floors, the remaining windows have collected so much graffiti that they look like stained glass. Still, there's something in here that echoes the building's storied past--remnants of the people and things that once occupied these spaces. (photos by Rachel Ferguson)
sign
Old department sign in upstairs office space.
Light filters in through saw tooth roof in abandoned warehouse
Light filters in through saw tooth roof in abandoned warehouse
"Restricted Area" notice in stairwell
"Restricted Area" notice in stairwell
Colorful graffiti on sawtooth windows
Colorful graffiti on sawtooth windows
A monolithic red door marks the end of public access and the entrance to the soon-to-be redeveloped space
A monolithic red door marks the end of public access and the entrance to the soon-to-be redeveloped space
Water pools beneath a section of broken roof in upstairs offices
Water pools beneath a section of broken roof in upstairs offices