About Overbuilt
Overbuilt is an atlas of the structures raised at vast cost and never lived in — the skyscrapers, malls, resorts, airports and entire cities built for a demand that never arrived. It is the inverse of a ghost town: a place abandoned not at the end of its life but before it ever began. Each entry is a structured case study of a single project's full life cycle: the vision behind it, why it failed, what it cost, and what stands there now.
What you'll find here
- Skyscrapers topped out and then left as empty concrete shells
- Entire planned cities built for millions and inhabited by thousands
- Malls, resorts and theme parks that opened to almost no one
- Airports and stadiums built for traffic that never came
- Speculative property booms frozen mid-construction by a crash
Every entry follows the same structure: a multi-paragraph summary, a dated timeline, "The Vision" and "Why It's Empty," numbered contributing factors, "What's There Now," and distilled lessons — with sources linked from real publications, financial filings and reporting.
The pattern repeats across the globe: a building is only ever worth what someone will actually use it for, not what it cost to build. Cataloging the overbuilding precisely makes that pattern impossible to miss.
Sister sites
Overbuilt is part of The Vanished Atlas — a family of sites mapping the different ways a place can end: