Industrial Complexes: Overview
When people hear the words “industrial complexes” they think of sprawling buildings comprised of factories, manufacturing plants, office towers, and lots of other intimidating infrastructures that would satisfy the requirements of Godzilla's happy hunting ground.
Well, that's not what it looks like at all, at least not all the time. Industrial complexes that focus on commercial manufacturing (thus requiring several buildings in a singular locality) are usually not recommended to be Godzilla tall, as they opt to occupy a large square area with at most ten levels instead of piling floors on top of each other. But if you think all industrial complexes require infrastructures, that's far from the truth.
There are several types of industrial complexes. One of the more famous ones is the military industrial complex made famous by former U.S. president Dwight Eisenhower, which will be further explained in in the succeeding pages. Others do not involve any systemic physical location of business processes at all, such as marriage industrial complexes. This site contains different types of industrial complexes, from the typical big-building ones to the ones that lean more towards economic models.

