Built for 200,000 — Now 60,000: The Industrial Autopsy of Gary, Indiana

Gary, Indiana was never supposed to be a normal city. It was a $3 billion industrial machine drawn on paper by U.S. Steel in 1906—an "Industrial Utopia" engineered to feed the largest integrated mill in the world. Today, the mill still burns, but the city around it has flatlined. In this installment of Industrial Autopsy, we perform a forensic examination of Gary, from the 1906 Land Company office where it was invented to the hollowed-out "limestone giants" of its downtown core. We’ll explore why the Gary Works mill outlived the community it created and apply my 10 Pillars of Decline to see if this "City of the Century" has reached a point of no return. Town Rating: Terminal [Score: 38.2] CHAPTERS: 00:00 — Introduction: The Fractured Fusion 01:26 — The Brain: The Gary Land Company & The 1906 Blueprint 04:52 — The Heart: Gary Works & The Iron Pumping Organ 07:59 — The Violent Cost: Strikes, Riots, and Martial Law 10:30 — The Trophy Room: The Rise and Fall of Downtown Gary 12:50 — Pillar 4: Abandoned Civic & Commercial Giants 15:23 — The Neighborhoods: From 178,000 to the Jackson 5 18:22 — The Forensic Lens: Explaining the Quality of Life Index 19:36 — The Data: Safety, Affordability, and Education Stats 22:20 — The Economy: A Machine Built for a World That Ended 25:20 — Final Score: Why Gary is Classified as "Terminal" 25:50 — Conclusion: Lessons from the Skeleton of the Past ABOUT THE SERIES: "Going There, Doing That!" is a documentary series focused on industrial history, urban decay, and the economic forensics of the Rust Belt. Every location is evaluated based on 10 specific pillars including industrial history, architecture, and socio-economic data. Recorded in 4K. #GaryIndiana #IndustrialAutopsy #RustBelt #UrbanDecay #USSteel #Documentary #GoingThereDoingThat #IndustrialHistory