Downtown Detroit

Cleveland’s enclave of entertainment could be mirrored in Detroit

OK, so Cleveland isn't exactly Detroit but this mixed-use entertainment project could be something that our city might see eventually. The developer of the project, who also restored the Book Cadillac has proposed something similar along Washington Boulevard.Excerpt:The current vitality of Fourth Street is the culmination of 15 years of work by the Maron family to turn a worn thoroughfare and its old buildings into a prime example of 21st-century urban redevelopment in the Midwest.“In the early 1980s, there were some people who wanted the unwashed, unloved warehouses and flats on East Fourth Street to be demolished,” said Thomas J. Yablonsky, the executive director of the Historic Gateway Neighborhood Corporation, a Cleveland nonprofit group focused on downtown development. “Give the Marons credit for the all-encompassing environment and experience they’ve put in one place there.”City leaders and local developers say East Fourth Street is confirmation of an entertainment-focused economic strategy that Cleveland’s development executives and lawmakers pursued in the mid-1990s when $650 million was spent on two new stadiums for its major league baseball and football teams, a new arena for the basketball team and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Read the entire article here.

While Model D is Away, Get Out and Play

Summer's here in the city. We're taking some time off to get out there in the heat and play in Detroit. Check in with FilterD for hot tips on what to do in the D during the next two weeks. We'll be back refreshed and ready to roll July 14. See you then.

He is Family: The Fierce, Hot, Messy Times of Adriel Fantastique

The timeless face behind many of Detroit's best anything goes dance parties since the early 1990s, Adriel Fantastique is the master of ceremonies for Skintight, Fierce Hot Mess and Family.

D-Biz: Avanti Press designs creative cards downtown
Microloans Bring Macro-Benefit to Detroit

When the banks won't answer the door, the smallest of small businesses can go knocking on the doors of Detroit's microloan programs, which are changing the face of the city one coffee shop or high tech start up at a time.

Bloggers look at social innovation and urban farming in Detroit

The two students from the Grinnell Detroit Social Innovation Project blog a bit about Detroit's urban farming and social innovation.Excerpt:Many suggest that the best way that Detroiters can access healthier foods, live healthier lives, and reduce the number of vacant buildings is through urban farming.Since coming to Detroit, I have learned to some degree what urban farming entails. In its simplest definition, it is growing and harvesting crops in an urban community. However, urban agriculture includes much more than this basic definition. It allows for job creation, access to fresh and healthy foods, beautification of the city, and a greener environment.Read the entire article here.

Grocery store may fill empty Borders location

The Eastern Market Corp. may fill the empty Borders location in the Compuware Building with a grocery store.Excerpt:Downtown Detroit workers and residents may soon have a new place to shop for fresh groceries in the heart of downtown.The Eastern Market Corp., the nonprofit entity that operates the city-owned Eastern Market, is exploring the idea of opening a small grocery store offering fresh fruits and vegetables and prepared foods in the space previously occupied by a Borders Books in the Compuware Building.Dan Carmody, president of the Eastern Market Corp., said a decision will be made by mid-July or so whether to go ahead with the plan.Read the entire article here.

DPS student’s portrait of President Barack Obama gets her to D.C. for a second time

Detroit Public School student Tangela Frazier gets a second trip to Washington D.C. because of the portrait of President Barack Obama she painted.Excerpt:A Detroit student's portrait of President Barack Obama has earned her a second trip to Washington, D.C. The Detroit Public Schools district says Tangela Frazier's portrait is a winner in the 2009 Congressional Artistic Discovery Competition. The 17-year-old Pershing High School 11th grader and other winners will spend Wednesday in Washington. Their work will be judged again at a reception, with the winner receiving a scholarship to the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia.Read the entire article here.

The political spirit of Detroit seems to be shifting

Detroit's political atmosphere is on a shift.Excerpt:There is a different atmosphere in Detroit these days, a city that not long ago seemed to be on another planet. Four years ago, the city was led by a "hip-hop" mayor famous for extravagant living, wild parties, and behaviour so outrageous that one out-of-town police force said it would no longer take responsibility for protecting him.Today, there is a new spirit of something like sobriety. After Kwame Kilpatrick went off to prison in October, there seemed to be a collective sign of relief. Suddenly, Detroiters seemed to want sane, competent, grown-up leadership. Dave Bing, a sports hero turned successful businessman, was elected to replace Kilpatrick.When he won a special election in May, most of the other major candidates bowed out of challenging the new mayor for the full four-year term that will be decided this November.Read the entire article here.

fDi Magazine names Detroit a city of the future

fDi Magazine, an investment mag produced by the Financial Times, released their cities of the future list and Detroit fell in at No. 10 for the largest cities of the future. Excerpt:fDi Magazine’s North American Cities of the Future 2009/10 shortlists, which took more than six months to research and involved the data collection of nearly 400 North American cities, ranks San Francisco, California, as the top large city of the future, followed closely by Austin, Texas. Of the large cities surveyed, San Luis Potosí in Mexico ranks top for cost effectiveness, while Charlotte, North Carolina, ranks top for FDI strategy according to the judging panel.Read the entire article here.

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