Downtown Detroit

Could Detroit’s future resemble the English countryside?

Detroit, as a shrinking city, may in the coming decades transform to look more like the English countryside and not the metropolis it once was, planners are saying.Excerpt:The idea may sound improbable, but Alan Mallach, a New Jersey-based planner who led the visiting team, said Detroit is evolving in that direction anyway, with large chunks of the city now largely abandoned."In a way, think of it as a 21st-Century version of a traditional country pattern," Mallach said. "You have high-density development on one side of the street and cows on the other, quite literally."The team's recommendations, contained in a draft report by a committee of the American Institute of Architects, are the latest in a flurry of ideas for dealing with Detroit's growing vacancy.Detroit's population is less than half of its 1950s peak, and an estimated 40 square miles of the 139-square-mile city are empty.The committee suggests that Detroit could recreate itself as a 21st-Century version of the English countryside."Isn't that basically what's happening? Even without any plans or strategies?" Mallach asked.Read the entire article here.

Tweet of the Week: Red pop, hot dogs, the RiverWalk and a little conversation

Who's the big winner this week? There's been a lot of Detroit tweets in the last seven days. Actually, there are a lot of Detroit tweets every day. Most of the tweets had to do with how the Red Wings suck or how the Red Wings were gonna destroy the Penguins. Sports tend to be a hot topic here in the Motor City -- not really a surprise though.A lot of talk about GM and the auto industry, as well.Of course none of that jazz made it to the final list. No offense Mike Illitch, Sidney Crosby, and those at GM. It just wasn't doing it for me this week.So, without further ado:Here's a trio from our friends at Inside Detroit. They were in attendance at the Detroit Regional Chamber Mackinac Conference last week and tweeted these few gems.@InsideDetroit: Did you know that Detroit has the 2nd largest theater district in the country! #mpc09No, I didn't know. @InsideDetroit: #mpc09: Detroit Zoo as a great model of regional collaboration. We do have big wins.It shouldn't be us against them, urban vs. suburban. The city needs the 'burbs and vice versa. Sometimes both sides forget that.Last but not least from Inside Detroit:@InsideDetroit: #mpc09 If we show people what Detroit has to offer people and that there are tons of us that love it here..others will love it too!It's true. A tweet not from the conference:@Michellellehcim: I'm mad that the Detroit Festival of the Arts is not happening this year... the year I'm actually living down here for the summer. figures!I think we're all a little upset about that one.And the winner is...Sycloneman: 2 hot dogs and a redpop - $5, conversation with homeless person - $1, lunch along the Detroit River, priceless!Not only is this tweet true (lunch on the Riverfront is pretty amazing) and funny, but five bucks for two hot dogs and red pop (we're assuming that it's Faygo)? Well, it's also frugal.

Detroit artist’s neckties grace pages of the NYTimes

The New York Times drops in on Bethany Shorb, a Detroit designer that created a line of ties inspired by paranoia. Excerpt: “Terminal Illness” is the name of one of the most recent designs from Bethany Shorb, a Detroit artist, and the fact that it has a title is a good indicator that it is not a traditional tie. What at first glance resembles an abstract pattern well within the vernacular of the necktie aesthetic is, rather, a repeated image of the swine-flu virus connected by shapes based on international-airport-terminal diagrams. A tie called “Snoutbreak!” features a simpler graphic that clearly suggests a pig’s nose; if you order this tie, you get a matching surgical mask free. These offerings from Shorb’s Cyberoptix Tie Lab were made available in early May, when the swine-flu freakout was at its height and the director general of the World Health Organization had recently warned that a pandemic had the potential to threaten “all of humanity.” Read the entire article here.

Hamtramck International Bazaar commences May 30

Hamtramck is often associated with the word bizarre (but also totally awesome). Starting May 30, it'll be a little different version of the word. Through the Cities of Promise and the City of Hamtramck, a monthly International Bazaar of farmers and vendors will set up shop on Caniff, from 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.The event will take place in the Caniff city parking lot (one block east of Jos. Campau on the north side of Caniff). There will also be live music, baked goods for sale and the DDA district will host a Sidewalk Sale. This event recurs every last Saturday of the month, ending in September with the Mini Worlds Fair, a multicultural offering of entertainment and fun.Additionally, the City will provide free recycling opportunities for all residents.  Simply bring recyclables (separation of plastics, papers and metals not necessary) to the 2009 International Bazaar and the City will make sure it is recycled.For more information contact Eve Doster Knepp here.

‘Fault Lines’ does piece on Detroit, combines the city’s reality with the city’s hope

In a recent piece of "Fault Lines" on al Jazeera English, journalist and filmmaker Avi Lewis explores Detroit and does a good job of twisting both the realities of the poor and working class with the feelings of hope and drive of the city's people.View the piece here.

Detroit farming, rehab center planning to join forces

Local rehab center has interest in Detroit farming and is looking to use a large tract of land.Excerpt:The Detroit-based Self-Help Addiction Rehabilitation Inc. (SHAR), a nonprofit drug rehab center funded by the state and others, is proposing that it be given up to 2,000 acres of vacant city-owned land to farm.The project, known as Recovery Park, would have the dual purpose of teaching addicts therapeutic and marketable skills and rehabbing the city itself, said SHAR's chief executive, Dwight Vaughter."We're looking at it as a way to use some of this space in Detroit to make it more purposeful, as well as to provide employment for our residents and people who may be disenfranchised," Vaughter said. "So we thought it was a perfect fit for us to get involved in."Read the entire article here.

Chicago Reader says there is no place in America like Detroit

The Chicago Reader gets Detroit.Excerpt:Yet even as GM closes plants and Chrysler faces Chapter 11, things are sprouting in Detroit. The city made the New York Times in March not for news about the Big Three but for the purchase by a Chicago couple of a house for $100, on a block being taken over by artists with plans for solar-powered art center and a vegetable garden. The city has a booming urban agriculture movement, and in April financier John Hantz, working with Michigan State University and the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, proposed building the “world’s largest urban farm” on vacant and abandoned properties, starting with a 70-acre fruit and veggie patch on the east side. Also last month, a group of local businesses began printing their own currency, the Detroit Cheer, in an effort to encourage local spending. “Detroit is the most democratic city in America,” writes Mitch Cope, one of the catalysts of the aforementioned artists’ block, on the blog at powerhouseproject.com. “Not in the political sense or government, but because the neighborhoods are ruled and run and controlled and developed by local citizens. It’s a city where you can do things, both bad and good as you choose without much oversight, enforcement of law, or rules imposed from above. It is up to the residents to decide what it is they want to do, how they govern their particular block or street, and therefore what they want their city to be. Democracy in Detroit has ironically come out of the lack of a functional government/political democracy.”Read the entire article here.

Detroit No. 3 in the nation when it comes to pizza, says GQ

GQ knows what's up when it comes to Detroit and pizza, ranking us in at No. 3. We'd argue for No. 1, but 3rd isn't a bad finish.Excerpt:Detroit is the third-best pizza city in America, GQ writer Alan Richman declared after traveling 20,000 miles, visiting 10 cities and tasting almost 400 pies to name the country's 25 best pizzas for the magazine's June issue.Making the accolade sweeter, Chicago came in fourth.New York and San Francisco were first and second."No city has more consistently satisfying pies than Detroit. No city executes its particular style" -- also called Sicilian or pan pizza -- "as flawlessly as Detroit," Richman wrote in his blog, an online companion to his article and his list of 25 best pizzas.Read the entire article here.

What is Detroit fashion? Bloggers seek city’s style

Fashion bloggers from cement hit the streets with video looking for Detroit street style. Go to Current here.

Detroit Cobras, the Motown (un)cover band

The Detroit Cobras are a cover band, in a way. They cover the songs that, for the most part, have been previously uncovered, doing mostly all B-sides of some of the Motown greats. And they say they couldn't have done it anywhere other than here.Excerpt:By jealously guarding the ploughshares, Nagy and Ramirez have cultivated an impressively focused oeuvre. The production has gotten slightly more exotic since the early days — on the band's most recent album, Tied & True (2007), they get crazy and punish a timpani — but it's still the same source music, the same amped-up, coulda-been classics. "I think my mom put it best when Baby (2005) came out," Nagy remembers. "She said, 'Wow, you guys have really grown up.' It's not like Phil Spector or anything, but there are a lot more layers going on." You see, the Cobras are loyal. Loyal to their influences, loyal to the band's all-but-abandoned city of origin — potentially a rusted-out cradle for a reborn genre, Nagy likes to believe. "That's the beauty of Detroit," she says. "In New York, you have to work five jobs just to pay the rent. Here, you can make music. We'll own this town by the end."Read the entire article here.

Our Partners

The Kresge Foundation logo
Ford Foundaiton

Common Ground Is Brewing

Support local stories and receive our signature roast straight to your door when you join at the Standard level (or above).

Drink Better, Read Local

Close the CTA

Don't miss out!

Everything Detroit, in your inbox every week.

Close the CTA

Already a subscriber? Enter your email to hide this popup in the future.