dead delta: the unfinished basement

 

This is the fifth installment of a photographic series called dead delta, which examines the shuttered, decaying, and derelict structures in Delta Junction, Alaska where I live. 

the unfinished basement

“WIT POWR” scribbled on a wall in an unfinished basement.

“WIT POWR” scribbled on a wall in an unfinished basement.

While walking beside an open field on Nistler Road one summer day I passed an open concrete structure partially cloaked by overgrown brush. I looked inside and saw 6-foot tall shrubs growing through the drain in the slab and a seemingly intact well pump lying beside the well head. It looked like the basement of a home that was never finished, and I thought this abandoned construction project would be an interesting subject for my dead delta series, even though I supposed it could still be resuscitated someday.

When I returned with my camera, I hopped inside and noticed some crude scribble on one of the walls. It was faded and misspelled, but it exclaimed boldly in capital letters: “WIT POWR”. No other graffiti adorned the walls, so the words struck me in a way they might not have if they had instead been carved on a bathroom stall full of expletives. I stood there puzzling over how someone who couldn’t even spell some basic 5-letter words could feel so confident declaring their racial superiority. But, then again, maybe they didn’t feel so confident expressing their beliefs and that’s why they wrote it in a forgotten place where no one would catch them. I lost my appetite for creating artsy images and left without taking any of the shots I had envisioned beforehand.

The graffiti made me reflect on other instances of racism and xenophobia I’ve observed in my rural Alaska town. I’ve witnessed an elderly man casually telling an elderly woman over coffee in the crowded dining area of our lone grocery store that all black people are inherently depraved, and I’ve overheard the N-word while shopping in the same store. I’ve heard many locals badmouth “the Russians” (immigrants mostly from Ukraine who make up a substantial portion of the town population) as well as the Puerto Ricans who serve in the military at Fort Greely and their families. When I worked for the Missile Defense Agency, one of my coworkers told a racist joke about Alaskan Natives to a room full of mostly older white men during a meeting and almost everyone laughed, including the boss. Just a few months ago, a crowd of ill-informed residents packed a city council meeting in reaction to a proposal that would have allowed an expected grand total of one refugee—who already had family in the area—to resettle in the community, with some residents clamoring that Delta Junction would be turned into a sanctuary city. (Obviously, those people didn’t know what “sanctuary city” actually means.) Needless to say, the proposal was rejected with many residents proud that they prevented Sharia law, migrant caravans, and sanctuary city status coming to Delta Junction, Alaska—or whatever irrational fear it was they conveniently selected so they didn’t have to say out loud that they didn’t want any foreigners or people of color in their town.

But there’s nothing special about racism in my town because racism is everywhere in America. Certainly, there is plenty of goodwill in my community, but ignoring racism only allows it to thrive. Racism doesn’t rely on logic to survive, just fear, the force of peer pressure, and the inertia of habit. It’s time to speak up and tell your racist friends and family that their behavior is unacceptable; they may not listen to protesters in the streets, but they might listen to you. Don’t support the WIT POWR movement with your vote, either, even if it means sacrificing on other issues you care about, because the concept of WIT POWR is antithetical to the Constitution and every amendment guaranteeing Americans our basic rights. If you haven’t realized by now that the current president does not have any intention of faithfully supporting and defending the Constitution of the United States, nor does he have the slightest bit of empathy for other people, you’re delusional. One day ago he used physical force to clear protesters peacefully exercising their First Amendment rights so he could pose with a Bible in front of a church because he thinks the people in his base are so stupid they’ll fall for a blatantly sycophantic publicity stunt and won’t care about the inhumanity in his threats to unleash the military on American citizens. He directly panders to the WIT POWR voters because they make up a sizable portion of his “base” and the rest of his base doesn’t seem to mind. If you’ve supported him to this point without being revolted by his behavior or his woeful incompetence, be revolted now.

Peace.

Tall brush has grown around the structure and a portable set of wooden stairs still lean against a wall.

Tall brush has grown around the structure and a portable set of wooden stairs still lean against a wall.

A well pump still lies inside the structure.

A well pump still lies inside the structure.

 

dead delta: keep out...for your own good

 

This is the fourth installment of a photographic series called dead delta, which examines the shuttered, decaying, and derelict structures in Delta Junction, Alaska where I live. 

keep out…for your own good

Before I moved to Alaska for a job at Fort Greely, I had heard the nearby town of Delta Junction was very small. As I drove from Fairbanks to Delta Junction for the first time, I passed the even smaller town of Big Delta, and I initially thought that was Delta Junction. I passed a handful of homes, junkyards, and some decaying old buildings in Big Delta and began thinking I had made a huge mistake. When I saw a couple gas stations, a bank, a post office, and a shopping plaza in the real Delta Junction a few miles later, I breathed a sigh of relief.

No doubt, the sight that most worried me in Big Delta was the retro-looking yellow “Delta Food Mart” sign standing in front of three rotting buildings with “KEEP OUT” signs posted on them. Eight years later, the surrounding brush has grown a bit higher but the rotting buildings are still there telling everyone to KEEP OUT, while the sign out front still invites people in from “7 AM - 12 Midnight” with the promise of 7 UP. The yellow building on the left is obviously the remains of the old Delta Food Mart, while the log building in the middle looks like an old-fashioned Alaskan lodge or roadhouse. With the TV antenna sticking out of its roof, I suspect the building on the right was a residence, but I suppose it could have been another shop, motel or restaurant…or some combination of the four, since this is rural Alaska we’re talking about.

The old Delta Food Mart is just a shell of a building now with no doors or windows left. Sitting on a concrete slab, it has actually survived quite well except for the log addition on the side which has collapsed. A few other people have taken a look inside judging by the footprints in the dust on the floor. An old refrigerator flipped over on its side is the only thing left inside. Around back, there’s a decaying shack full of junk, a decaying Quonset hut full of more junk, an old greenhouse frame exploding with brush from the inside, another decaying shack adjoining the Quonset hut, some other scattered junk in the overgrown grass including a pile of tires and a car door, and a mysterious steering wheel bolted to a tree.

The sagging roof of the log building next door is covered in moss. Christmas lights are still wrapped around the tree out front. What appears to have been an arctic entry on the left side of the building has collapsed, and the front door is now stuck partially open, unable to swing in or out. Behind the front door is an “OPEN” sign leaning against the wall, likely in the same exact position it was left some 30 years ago. The ceiling has collapsed in a few places and the floor is very rotten from water damage, but the windows are surprisingly intact for a building that’s been abandoned for so long, including one large picture window looking into the backyard. The entire floor has collapsed in one of the back rooms, and I could see through missing floorboards to the basement underneath my feet as I poked my head around a hallway containing a bathroom and another dark room that I couldn’t reach safely. The intact stone fireplace contrasts against the rest of the decaying interior, and there are still ashes, bricks, scrap paper and a partially burned log in the hearth.

The last building on the right is boarded up very well, but the door to the basement in back is open. However, the ceiling inside the basement has collapsed, so I couldn’t check out the interior. The flat roof on that building has obviously failed, so I can’t imagine the interior looks much better than the log building next door.

Take a stroll around these properties yourself through the images below…

The Log Building

For years I interpreted the “KEEP OUT” sign on the log building to mean “keep out, private property”, but after observing the inside I wonder if the person who fixed the sign on the building intended it to mean “keep out…for your own good”.

For years I interpreted the “KEEP OUT” sign on the log building to mean “keep out, private property”, but after observing the inside I wonder if the person who fixed the sign on the building intended it to mean “keep out…for your own good”.

There’s still a partially burned log in the fireplace, which is the only part of the log building left in good shape.

There’s still a partially burned log in the fireplace, which is the only part of the log building left in good shape.

The floor has completely collapsed in the room on the far side of the door frame in this image, leaving a dangerous 12-foot drop. Several floorboards in the near room are missing and most of the remaining ones are rotten to the point where I thought…

The floor has completely collapsed in the room on the far side of the door frame in this image, leaving a dangerous 12-foot drop. Several floorboards in the near room are missing and most of the remaining ones are rotten to the point where I thought I would fall through if I walked any farther. A bottle of Clorox bleach still sits on one of the shelves, and it’s possible there are more items in the cupboards on the right that I couldn’t inspect. Someone spelled “69 4:20” on the mirror in the background with adhesive decals, but I’m not convinced that person was a vandal, especially since there are no other obvious signs of vandalism inside.

The floor was too rotten for me to check out the bathroom and the room on the left in this image, so I stretched to position my tripod as close as I could for a picture. The bathroom has naturally survived water damage better than the room on the le…

The floor was too rotten for me to check out the bathroom and the room on the left in this image, so I stretched to position my tripod as close as I could for a picture. The bathroom has naturally survived water damage better than the room on the left.

When’s the last time you saw one of these beer cans? For me, the answer is…never. And is that a bird nest?

When’s the last time you saw one of these beer cans? For me, the answer is…never. And is that a bird nest?

The Backyard

A car door rests against the Quonset hut in back. Nearby, there’s a steering wheel bolted to a tree.

A car door rests against the Quonset hut in back. Nearby, there’s a steering wheel bolted to a tree.

This sign was manufactured in August 1980 according to the stamp on its side. Apparently, Olympia Beer signs were very popular in the 1970s and 1980s, but the old brewery where the beer was made has been mothballed since 2003.

This sign was manufactured in August 1980 according to the stamp on its side. Apparently, Olympia Beer signs were very popular in the 1970s and 1980s, but the old brewery where the beer was made has been mothballed since 2003.

I think this was a greenhouse…either way, I suppose it is now.

I think this was a greenhouse…either way, I suppose it is now.

The Old Delta Food Mart

That 7 UP logo was in use from 1980 to 1987, which is probably the last time 7 UP was popular enough to warrant a sign like this being displayed by the roadside. When most businesses in the United States fold or change locations, their signs are rem…

That 7 UP logo was in use from 1980 to 1987, which is probably the last time 7 UP was popular enough to warrant a sign like this being displayed by the roadside. When most businesses in the United States fold or change locations, their signs are removed or covered up so people know they are no longer open—many city codes require this to keep their towns looking aesthetically pleasing and to prevent signs from becoming hazards from lack of maintenance. But in Delta Junction many signs still stand years after the death or relocation of their associated businesses. Even some of the businesses in Delta that aren’t dead have dead signs out front. One of my future dead delta installments will be dedicated to the dead signs around town.

A log addition to the old Delta Food Mart has mostly collapsed.

A log addition to the old Delta Food Mart has mostly collapsed.

The interior of the old Delta Food Mart is very well lit thanks to the large opening on its south end, but there’s not much to look at inside.

The interior of the old Delta Food Mart is very well lit thanks to the large opening on its south end, but there’s not much to look at inside.

A notice from the State of Alaska DEC is still posted on an empty wall inside the old Delta Food Mart.

A notice from the State of Alaska DEC is still posted on an empty wall inside the old Delta Food Mart.

?

The back of the remaining building. The door to the basement was open but the ceiling had collapsed, preventing access. The metal roof on this building is nearly flat and much of the metal paneling has blown off, so I suspect the water damage inside…

The back of the remaining building. The door to the basement was open but the ceiling had collapsed, preventing access. The metal roof on this building is nearly flat and much of the metal paneling has blown off, so I suspect the water damage inside is very bad.