In 1963, Aerojet General was given a $3 million contract from the U.S. Air Force to build a manufacturing and testing site for rockets that would send astronauts to the moon.
The plant was constructed in the center of Florida's Everglades in the town of Homestead.
Beneath a large metal shed, a 150-foot deep silo housed the largest solid-fuel rocket motor ever built. The rocket was tested three times between 1965 and 1967.
Then NASA dropped the project. The agency decided to go with liquid-fuel rocket engines instead. The plant was closed in 1969, leaving the rocket behind.
Photographer Naaman Fletcher, who blogs at What's Left of Birmingham, visited the abandoned facility in April 2010.
Here's what remains.
To reach the deserted plant, Fletcher had to bike six miles down a road that is inaccessible to vehicles.
The main complex, seen in the distance, sits on the edge of a swamp.
"There wasn't another human around me for miles. Very eerie," Fletcher told me.
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