Detroit/Metro is an influential region and it is up to us to keep Detroit that way. We must revitalize the attitudes of our citizens, the political, economic and social atmosphere, and the perceptions of outsiders. If we create a DETROIT ARMY of individuals who love all Detroit has to offer, we can help Detroit remain a proud, successful, powerful, influential, and significant metropolis.

Showing posts with label Neighborhoods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neighborhoods. Show all posts

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Briggs Neighborhood

While I love to be the bearer of all things good, at times I instead like to take the interesting and eye opening approach. Recently while in the city I decided to head over to the Briggs neighborhood, which is also called North Corktown. Briggs is located North of old Tiger Stadium and just West of Motor City Casino. The boundaries are approximately Martin Luther King Blvd. to the North, Fisher Freeway West to the West and South, and Grand River Ave. to the East.

To drive up to the neighborhood in a rear wheel drive vehicle with the streets completely unplowed and snow covered, while seeing only 3-4 people along with countless swaths of open fields, certainly left an impression. It might as well have been farm country in Northern Michigan. Yet, this wasn't farm country in Northern Michigan, this was within a mile of the city center of Detroit. The West side of the neighborhood, which is where I was mostly, was completely barren with old deteriorating houses scattered throughout. Otherwise, I found a church, a liquor store and what seemed like a junkyard. That was about it, but this neighborhood was anything but boring. Instead, it was one of the most fascinating scenes I have ever witnessed.

Although much is made of Detroit neighborhoods such as this, which seem to have returned to nature, only a small proportion of Detroit neighborhoods are like this. Again, this is not representative of the Detroit neighborhoods as a whole, as much as hipster film makers on Current TV would like you to believe. Moreover, I'm told that while I mostly stuck to the West side of the Neighborhood, the East side has had recent development and plans for revitalization. Next time I am in the area, I will look further into the East side and update this story.

Although I'm not privy to the entire history of the area, I do know that it has a mixture of both Whites and Blacks living in the area, or what is left of it. Apparently it became known as a neighborhood that had many white people in an overwhelmingly non-white city. If anyone has any more info on the neighborhood's history, feel free to comment.

If you're interested in urban prairie, the effects of suburban sprawl and flight, and the results of a city losing over half its population in a mere 50 years, this is one of the places to check out. It's more than the poverty and urban decay that can be seen in other Detroit neighborhoods because it is past that point. It is on its way to returning to its natural roots from well before Detroit reached its peak of 2 million people.

The pictures can tell the story much better than I. Below are a few of the pictures I took during my excursion, along with a link to the complete set of pictures on Flickr.

The house in the background of the above picture was one of maybe two houses within a radius of 2-3 "plots" in any given direction, although I can't be certain because it is impossible to figure out where property lines are or would be.

Again, while there is basically nothing around this house, it is not abandoned as is the case with other houses in the area.

The vastness of the nothingness around these houses is hard to describe in words. Even the pictures can only tell part of the story.

The above picture shows the ultimate contrast. While a lone home surrounded by empty fields is seen in the forefront, the "retro elegant," and "neo decadent," (their words...not mine) Motor City Casino rises in the background.

While the neighborhood has crumbled and vanished, on the East end, some things still remain. Above is a neighborhood church, which I saw churchgoers (hopefully) come out of. Across the street to the South is also a liquor store which I saw multiple people (multiple meaning around 5) walk into.


This picture gives a pretty good idea of the area. It's something to think about...

Full Detroit-Briggs Neighborhood Flickr Set

Detroit Army

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Boston Edison District

Over my December break from law school, I decided to do some driving around the city and take pictures of various areas. Detroit is a big city geographically and I only got so far, but I did manage to take some good pictures in the Boston Edison District. The Boston Edison District is comprised of 30 blocks and 900 homes and which boundaries consist of Boston, Edison, Linwood, and Woodward. Here is how Sarah Klein describes it in a June 2002 article in the MetroTimes.

"The neighborhood was founded at the turn of the century, with the majority of the homes built by the Roaring ’20s. It was originally designed as a sedate residential area, complete with wide boulevards and a variety of homes, ranging from palatial to modest. The neighborhood was once home to Detroit automotive tycoons including Henry and Edsel B. Ford, and wealthy businessmen such as Sebastian Kresge, founder of the S.S. Kresge Company, which became Kmart."

Source: MetroTimes http://www.metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=3328

There are many other very nice neighborhoods in Detroit City, but this one really feels like a neighborhood within a city, just with huge mansions lining the streets, as opposed to say Palmer Woods, which in my opinion feels like a separate entity than the city. It was amazing to see the contrast between the huge mansions, and not only the surrounding areas outside of the neighborhood, but also the boarded up houses within the neighborhood. I am posting some pictures below, as well as posting a flickr link to the entire set.

Link: Historic Boston Edison District in Detroit, Michigan





Above is a prime example of a boarded up house mixed in with the rest. This wouldn't happen in Gross Pointe or Bloomfield Hills. It's something to think about.




Detroit Army