Roosevelt Warehouse


The Roosevelt Warehouse, more commonly known as the Detroit Public Schools Book Depository, is a vacant building in Detroit on 14th & Marantette street. It is understood to have been designed by Albert Kahn and that it was originally a Post Office before being used as the Public Schools' surplus equipment depository. It is currently owned by Ford Motor Company who have plans to renovate it, as part of its new Ford Corktown Campus.

History

The building caught fire in 1987. The fire and efforts to extinguish it heavily damaged much of the supplies inside, which included science and sports equipment, scissors, crayons, and books, many still unused and in their original wrapping. After the fire the building was abandoned, along with all of its contents. The reason why the building's contents were not salvaged by Detroit Public Schools is unknown.
Over the years the building and its contents has been heavily vandalized and further damaged by scrappers. The building remains standing.
In 2009 a frozen human corpse was found in the basement in a lift-shaft. It took 24 hours before the authorities attended to the scene. Previously easy to enter, the building has since been boarded up. The contents of the warehouse were removed over the summer of 2012 in preparation for possible conversion into a parking garage.
The only remaining and existing access point to the building exists by way of a tunnel which runs under 15th Street, between the book depository, and the property of the Michigan Central Station, which was used back when the post office was using the railway services. Both are now owned by the Ford Motor Company.