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Thread: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    I know there are a lot of Detroit area residents on here. A few of us have talked about making a thread to discuss the city before. I came across an article from Time and figured I would post it, so people can discuss the article and what they love/hate/miss about the city. I miss being there every day.  :-(




    Abandoned homes in Detroit.


    If Detroit had been savaged by a hurricane and submerged by a ravenous flood, we'd know a lot more about it. If drought and carelessness had spread brush fires across the city, we'd see it on the evening news every night. Earthquake, tornadoes, you name it — if natural disaster had devastated the city that was once the living proof of American prosperity, the rest of the country might take notice.

    But Detroit, once our fourth largest city, now 11th and slipping rapidly, has had no such luck. Its disaster has long been a slow unwinding that seemed to remove it from the rest of the country. Even the death rattle that in the past year emanated from its signature industry brought more attention to the auto executives than to the people of the city, who had for so long been victimized by their dreadful decision-making.

    By any quantifiable standard, the city is on life support. Detroit's treasury is $300 million short of the funds needed to provide the barest municipal services. The school system, which six years ago was compelled by the teachers' union to reject a philanthropist's offer of $200 million to build 15 small, independent charter high schools, is in receivership. The murder rate is soaring, and 7 out of 10 remain unsolved. Three years after Katrina devastated New Orleans, unemployment in that city hit a peak of 11%. In Detroit, the unemployment rate is 28.9%. That's worth spelling out: twenty-eight point nine percent.

    If, like me, you're a Detroit native who recently went home to find out what went wrong, your first instinct is to weep. If you live there still, that's not the response you're looking for. Old friends and new acquaintances, people who confront the city's agony every day, told me, "I hope this isn't going to be another article about how terrible things are in Detroit."

    It is — and it isn't. That's because the story of Detroit is not simply one of a great city's collapse. It's also about the erosion of the industries that helped build the country we know today. The ultimate fate of Detroit will reveal much about the character of America in the 21st century. If what was once the most prosperous manufacturing city in the nation has been brought to its knees, what does that say about our recent past? And if it can't find a way to get up, what does that say about our future?

    My City of Ruins
    On my trip to Detroit, I took a long drive around my hometown. Downtown, I visited a lovely new esplanade along the riverfront, two state-of-the-sport stadiums and a classic old hotel restored to modern luxury. In leafy Grosse Pointe, I saw handsome houses anyone would want to live in (and, thanks to the crash of the auto business, available at prices most Americans haven't seen in decades). At the General Motors Technical Center, in the industrial suburb Warren, the parking lots were mostly empty — an awful lot of engineers have been thrown out of work — but the survivors showed me some pretty impressive technology. I liked the cars that "talked" to other cars, making accidents all but impossible, and I was especially impressed by a prototype Chevy fueled entirely by hydrogen. Hydrogen!

    But to a native, downtowns and suburbs, even suburbs hurting from an economic calamity, are not the real Detroit. The Detroit I both wanted to see and was afraid to see was the city itself, the elm-lined streets of fond memory where my friends and I grew up and went to school and lived idyllic 1950s lives, the place that America once knew as the Arsenal of Democracy.

    The neighborhood where I lived as a child, where for decades orderly rows of sturdy brick homes lined each block, is now the urban equivalent of a boxer's mouth, more gaps than teeth. Some of the surviving houses look as if the wrecker's ball is the only thing that could relieve their pain. On the adjacent business streets, commercial activity is so palpably absent you'd think a neutron bomb had been detonated — except the burned-out storefronts and bricked-over windows suggest that something physically destructive happened as well.

    Similar scenes are draped across most of the city's 138 sq. mi., yielding a landscape that bears a closer relation to a postapocalyptic nightmare than to the prosperous and muscular place I remember. The City of Homeowners, some called it, a city with endless miles of owner-occupied bungalows and half-capes and modest mock Tudors that were the respectable legacy of five decades of the auto industry's primacy in the American economy and Detroiters' naive faith that the industry would never run out of gas.

    But it did. Detroit fell victim not to one malign actor but to a whole cast of them. For more than two decades, the insensate auto companies and their union partners and the elected officials who served at their pleasure continued to gun their engines while foreign competitors siphoned away their market share. When this played out against the city's legacy of white racism and the corrosive two-decade rule of a black politician who cared more about retribution than about resurrection, you can begin to see why Detroit careened off the road.

    Who Killed Detroit?
    Most of us thought Detroit was pretty wonderful back in the '50s and early '60s, its mighty industrial engine humming in top gear, filling America's roads with the nation's signifying product and the city's houses and streets with nearly 2 million people. Of course, if you were black, it was substantially less wonderful, its neighborhoods as segregated as any in America. On the northwest side, not far from where I grew up, a homebuilder had in the 1940s erected a six-foot-high concrete wall, nearly half a mile long, to separate his development from an adjacent black neighborhood. Still, white Detroit believed that the riots that ravaged Los Angeles in 1965 and a number of other cities the following summer would never burn across our town. Black people in Detroit, enlightened whites believed, had jobs and homes, and even if those homes were on the other side of an apartheid wall, their owners had a stake in the city.

    Some did, but too many others, invisible to white Detroit, did not. The riots that scorched the city in July 1967, leaving 43 people dead, were the product of an unarticulated racism that few had acknowledged, and a self-deceiving blindness that had made it possible for even the best-intentioned whites to ignore the straitjacket of segregation that had crippled black neighborhoods, ill served the equally divided schools and enabled the casual brutality of a police force that was too white and too loosely supervised.

    The '67 riots sent thousands of white Detroiters fleeing for the suburbs. Even if black Detroiters with financial resources wished to follow, they could not: the de facto segregation was virtually de jure in most Detroit suburbs. One suburban mayor boasted, "They can't get in here. Every time we hear of a Negro moving in ... we respond quicker than you do to a fire."

    Soon Detroit became a majority-black city, and in 1973 it elected its first black mayor. Coleman Young was a talented politician who spent much of his 20 years in office devoting his talents to the politics of revenge. He called himself the "MFIC" — the IC stood for "in charge," the MF for exactly what you think. Young was at first fairly effective, when he wasn't insulting suburban political leaders and alienating most of the city's remaining white residents with a posture that could have been summed up in the phrase Now it's our turn. But by his third term, Young was governing more by rhetoric than by action. These were the years of a local phenomenon known as Devil's Night, a nihilistic orgy of arson that in one especially explosive year saw 800 houses burn to the ground in 72 hours. Violent crime soared under Young. The school system began to cave in on itself. When jobs disappeared with the small businesses boarding up their doors and abandoning the city, the mayor seemed to find it more useful to bid the business owners good riddance than to address the job losses. Detroit was dying, and its mayor chose to preside over the funeral rather than find a way to work with the suburban and state officials who now detested him every bit as much as he had demonized them.

    When Young finally left office in 1993, he bragged that Detroit had achieved a "level of autonomy ... that no other city can match." He apparently didn't care that it was the autonomy of a man in a rowboat, in the middle of the ocean, without oars.

    But Young isn't the only politician to blame. In 1956, when I was 8 years old, my Congressman was John D. Dingell. There are people in southeastern Michigan who are still represented by Dingell, the longest-serving member in the history of the House of Representatives. "The working men and women of Michigan and their families have always been Congressman Dingell's top priority," his website declares, and I suppose he thinks he has served them well — by resisting, in succession, tougher safety regulations, more-stringent mileage standards, relaxed trade restrictions and virtually any other measure that might have forced the American automobile industry to make cars that could stand up to foreign competition.


    By so ably satisfying the wishes of the auto industry — by encouraging southeastern Michigan's reliance on this single, lumbering mastodon — Dingell has in fact played a signal role in destroying Detroit. He was hardly alone; if you wanted to get elected in southeastern Michigan, you had to support the party line dictated by the Big Four — GM, Ford, Chrysler and their co-conspirator the United Auto Workers. Anything that might limit the industry's income was bad for the auto industry, and anything bad for the auto industry was deemed dangerous to Detroit.

    The UAW had once been the most visionary of American unions. As early as the 1940s, UAW president Walter Reuther was urging the auto companies to produce small, inexpensive cars for the average American. In 1947 and '48 the union even offered to cut wages if the Big Three would reduce the price of their cars. But by the early 1980s, the UAW had entered into a nakedly self-interested pact with the auto companies. After the union's president joined GM's chief congressional lobbyist to defeat a tougher mileage standard in 1990, the lobbyist declared that "we would not have won without the UAW." It was, he said, "one of the proudest days of my life."

    The union really can't be blamed for pushing for fabulous wages and lush benefits for its members — that game required two players, and the automakers knew only how to say yes. But the union leadership's fatal mistake was insisting that workers with comparable skills and comparable seniority be paid comparable wages, irrespective of who employed them. If a machinist at a prosperous GM deserved $25 an hour, so did a machinist who worked for a barely profitable Chrysler or for a just-holding-its-own supplier plant that made axles or wheels or windshield wipers.

    This defiant inattention to market reality not only placed the less healthy firms in peril, but by pricing labor so uniformly high, it also closed off Detroit to any possible diversification of its industrial base. When the automakers' inattention to engineering, style and quality caused them to crash into a wall of consumer indifference, there was no other industry that could step forward and employ workers who would have been thrilled to make even a fraction of what they once earned. Now nearly 1 in 3 Detroit residents is out of work — and not many of the unemployed have a prayer of finding a job anytime soon.

    Reviving Motown
    If white racism, Coleman Young and a delusional dependence on the auto industry's belief in its own virtues put Detroit where it is today, what — if anything — can pull this tragic city out of its death spiral?

    You could do worse than to begin with some form of regional government. During Young's reign and for many years thereafter, the possibility of city-suburban cooperation — which is to say, black-white cooperation — was close to nil. The black city didn't want white suburbanites telling it what to do, and white suburbanites had no interest in assuming the burden of a black city.


    L. Brooks Patterson, the long-serving and exceptionally able chief executive of suburban Oakland County, a prosperous community that borders Detroit to the north, represents the latter view well. "They say, 'As Detroit goes, so goes Oakland County,' " Patterson said a few weeks ago. "Not true!" He apparently believes that Eight Mile Road, the fabled thoroughfare that defines Detroit's northern border, is an impermeable membrane insulating his county from the city's ills. But Patterson knows that Oakland's prized AAA bond rating is in peril because the rating agencies are mindful of the county's proximity to Detroit to the south and Flint to the north. A downgrade could cost his constituents millions of dollars, and as the situation in Detroit deteriorates, he and his counterparts in adjacent counties will have no choice but to seek common solutions.

    For its part, Detroit must address the fact that a 138-sq.-mi. city that once accommodated 1.85 million people is way too large for the 912,000 who remain. The fire, police and sanitation departments couldn't efficiently service the yawning stretches of barely inhabited areas even if the city could afford to maintain those operations at their former size. Detroit has to shrink its footprint, even if it means condemning decent houses in the gap-toothed areas and moving their occupants to compact neighborhoods where they might find a modicum of security and service. Build greenbelts, which are a lot cheaper to maintain than untraveled streets. Encourage urban farming. Let the barren areas revert to nature.

    Most crucially, the entire region has to realize that defining itself solely by the misperceived needs of a single industry has left all of southeastern Michigan dazed and bleeding. And yet the conditions for resetting that economic model couldn't be more favorable. The collapse of the UAW's prohibitive wage scale, coupled with the vast unemployment, is turning what was once the nation's most expensive labor market into one of the cheapest. For the first time since Henry Ford offered $5 a day to the men who assembled the Model T back in 1914, Detroit is open to new industry.

    America isn't so keen on national industrial policy. But in Detroit's past, you can find an idea for its future — and the nation's. Back in the '50s, the Federal Government began investing what would eventually reach half a trillion dollars in what became the interstate highway system. You could have considered that an incredible subsidy for the auto industry — which it was — but it was also an investment in the nation's future.

    It's an adaptable model. The fuel-cell technology that dazzled me at the GM Tech Center is less about autos than it is about energy — energy, as hydrogen, that exists in every molecule of water. What's to stop us now from turning Detroit — its highly trained engineering talent, its skilled and unskilled workforce desperate for employment, its underutilized production facilities — into the Arsenal of the Renewable Energy Future?

    If we did, Detroit could go back to building something America needs. As a nation, we could prove that we can still make things. And while we're at it, we could regenerate not just a city but our sense of who we are.

    http://www.time.com/time/nation/arti...925796,00.html

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    Moderator Peavey's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    Thanks, GB.
    I'm teaching Urban Sociology and I am using the site http://detroityes.com/home.htm

    I think I got that from you at one point, am I right?
    I'm going to use this as an in-class reading.

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    [quote author=Peavey link=topic=24044.msg1523802#msg1523802 date=1264980243]
    Thanks, GB.
    I'm teaching Urban Sociology and I am using the site http://detroityes.com/home.htm

    I think I got that from you at one point, am I right?
    I'm going to use this as an in-class reading.
    [/quote]


    Yes, I have posted that site before. The BEST part is the fabulous ruins section. It has a section on my old neighborhood there, Brightmoor.
    This is a wonderful site to see actual homes and sale prices.  Some are as low as four cents with the mortgage and taxes!
    http://www.zillow.com/homes/brightmoor,-mi_rb/

    Like the article I posted said, the neighborhood is like a boxers mouth. Not many left standing in the place I lived.  :-(

    It's pretty pathetic. A lot of those homes have some wonderful architecture. Bedrooms with built in oak dressers in the walls, dining rooms with built in oak china cabinets, rounded archways inside connecting rooms, and most have a back door on the side-when you enter that door, you can go into the basement or two steps up to the kitchen. Then, my all time favorite thing, the milk door!

    I have lived in quite a few states and big cities. I guess Detroit is just my favorite.

    I am wondering if anyone here, besides Gnu & Rea, has ever gone to the Freedom Festival fireworks. It is one of THE best attractions the city has. They set up a few barges on the Detroit River and light them off from there. It has been the biggest display in North America for the 4th of July for a long time. You can see the carnival going on over in Windsor, too.

    Another favorite attraction of mine is the Budweiser Hoedown. Tons of current country artists play for three days for free at Hart Plaza.
    This fountain is great to play in and cool off in during a hot concert day.


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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    Thanks for posting this bella,
    Yes this brings sadness to my heart seeing over my life my hometown turning into such a mess that it is sick..
    Detroit I am from and say with my head held high and pride!
    It was full of many things to do and places to go and music,art,entertainment,friends,partys,culture..we have every color a person is and every every type of music you could hear..with every home so nice and kept up...when somewhere somehow it all went to hell..it was the local goverment and police that turned it into a drug invested burned down gutted hole of a city it once was..will it ever be returned? I honestly dont know because it got so rough and bad that I did not want my kid's living in such a place..so I left Detroit and moved north to walled lake..and I hope it does have a turn around so i can take them and show them where i grew up hung out and about all my friends and Bella we have a time capsule in the back yard on westbrook buried and this summer I belive will be the 20 year mark and we have to go get it!!!!! I know Dawn is still in that house so we shouldnt be shot lol..I dont recall who all was there when we did it but I hope they remember and show up we all should set a date to do this!!

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    I am certainly down for the retrieval of the time capsule!!!

    The corruption the city has faced is just unbelievable and inexplicable. It breaks my heart to see what has happened to a place I love so much. Prime Time News did a story on Detroit and Coleman Young in the early 90s. They said Detroit was the road at the end of the ruins. 

    Wikipedia lists our old neighborhood as one of the most dangerous in the city of Detroit. Crazy, eh?

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    :2angry:   

    This video talks about bodies piling up in the Wayne County morgue, sometimes for up to three years.
    It also does a quick spot on the Michigan Central Train Station. One of many beautiful, yet deteriorating buildings in the city.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8pd2qckrl_4

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    We Almost Lost Detroit.  :-(

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nga2_XK3kmE




    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmup8AofWnw

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.




    This gutted castle-like apartment on Peterboro Street  is one of the numerous abandoned elegant apartments that marred the city following the suburban flight that began in the fifties.





    The Ransom Gillis House at the corner of Alfred and John R. bespeaks the glories of the Gilded Age in Detroit.


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    Senior Member deeply shaded's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    It's amazing how this town is just abandoned and deteriorating.
    Quote Originally Posted by beli View Post
    kim kardashian - made famous for having a sex tape, should die in a fire
    Quote Originally Posted by McMama View Post
    Have you ever walked into a mall, sat on God's lap, and had your picture taken?

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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    [quote author=deeply shaded link=topic=24044.msg1524839#msg1524839 date=1265072847]
    It's amazing how this town is just abandoned and deteriorating.
    [/quote]

    It's nothing short of heartbreaking when it's the placed you called home.

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    Senior Member deeply shaded's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    [quote author=GothaBella link=topic=24044.msg1524847#msg1524847 date=1265073262]
    It's nothing short of heartbreaking when it's the placed you called home.
    [/quote]   I've never been that attached to a town. My hometown could drop into a sink hole and I'd be meh.
    Quote Originally Posted by beli View Post
    kim kardashian - made famous for having a sex tape, should die in a fire
    Quote Originally Posted by McMama View Post
    Have you ever walked into a mall, sat on God's lap, and had your picture taken?

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    [quote author=deeply shaded link=topic=24044.msg1524863#msg1524863 date=1265073844]
      I've never been that attached to a town. My hometown could drop into a sink hole and I'd be meh.
    [/quote]

    I have lived in tons of states/cities/towns. I blame Arizona for making me so homesick!

    Plus, there is plenty of work in my field back home. There is never a shortage of burnt houses and buildings in need of repair.


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    Senior Member deeply shaded's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    I just find it fascinating how things are just abandoned and left to collapse into piles. [quote author=GothaBella link=topic=24044.msg1524874#msg1524874 date=1265074278]
    I have lived in tons of states/cities/towns. I blame Arizona for making me so homesick!

    Plus, there is plenty of work in my field back home. There is never a shortage of burnt houses and buildings in need of repair.


    [/quote]

    Most of those buildings look like they are beyond repair. Some of those houses look like they were awesome in their day, though.
    Quote Originally Posted by beli View Post
    kim kardashian - made famous for having a sex tape, should die in a fire
    Quote Originally Posted by McMama View Post
    Have you ever walked into a mall, sat on God's lap, and had your picture taken?

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    [quote author=deeply shaded link=topic=24044.msg1524879#msg1524879 date=1265074626]
    I just find it fascinating how things are just abandoned and left to collapse into piles.
    Most of those buildings look like they are beyond repair. Some of those houses look like they were awesome in their day, though.
    [/quote]

    A lot of them are beyond repair. Also, it is impossible for some homeowners to sell. Some are on fixed incomes and can never move, and others own homes that need to be up to code. It is almost impossible to get homeowners insurance in Detroit, but you have to have it.

    Also, there are no grocery chains within the city limits.

    Once a house becomes abandoned, it gets totally stripped. Everything from the the aluminum siding to the copper pipes. They even take the trim around the ceiling and floor, as well as sinks and toilets.



    Peavey, this is a pretty good video. It shows a little more than the downtown destruction and disaster.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pz_vDOrqOOQ

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    I was talking with Hellbettie and One Man Media Mafia recently, and we were talking about making a thread about Detroit and the surrounding areas. I guess the Time article kind of made the perfect opportunity.

    This is an aerial photo of Cass Lake. It's located less than 20 miles north of Detroit. My son lives on this lake. I spent many years out there. Oakland County, where this lake is located, has about 36 lakes per every six square miles.
    No road is straight out there, they all curve around the lakes.






    When I was with my sons dad, we lived on this lake. Right where the road comes in on the right, we were about a half of a block up.


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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    With a city like Detroit you have to believe that perseverance will prevail where all others will fail!  It is SAD to see your hometown just turn to decay in front of your eyes, but you have to believe that the city won't roll over and die.

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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    http://icehousedetroit.blogspot.com/

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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    This breaks me up. I think old architecture should be preserved as much as possible. I can think of buildings in downtown LA that deserve attention, I couldn't imagine a whole city.

    Definetly marking to keep up on this thread.


    Quote Originally Posted by MoonDancer View Post
    And apparently you fuck the mods here.

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    [quote author=garygnu link=topic=24044.msg1525191#msg1525191 date=1265114628]
    With a city like Detroit you have to believe that perseverance will prevail where all others will fail!  It is SAD to see your hometown just turn to decay in front of your eyes, but you have to believe that the city won't roll over and die.
    [/quote]

    That's how I feel, too. The city has always had a lot to offer in my eyes. Like that time we were downtown and saw the big turkey wearing Adidas, and the huge elephant with polka dots. We kept getting cut off in traffic but them and their police tactical escorts.  :lol: We never did see the parade that stuff was for, though.

    [quote author=dogday link=topic=24044.msg1525414#msg1525414 date=1265132823]
    http://icehousedetroit.blogspot.com/
    [/quote]
    Oh, thanks for that link! They have a facebook fan page, too. Of course I joined it.


    [quote author=g r ee n ey e s link=topic=24044.msg1525480#msg1525480 date=1265136276]
    This breaks me up. I think old architecture should be preserved as much as possible. I can think of buildings in downtown LA that deserve attention, I couldn't imagine a whole city.

    Definetly marking to keep up on this thread.
    [/quote]
    Not that long ago some asshats were stealing pieces of architecture and selling them to be used on buildings in Chicago.  :x 

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    This is my "I'm homesick" theme song. It is written and performed by Wayne Kramer, formerly of the MC5.
    I really didn't care for them too much.
    I love that they show the train station in this vid.




    It's a hard wind blows through the buildings and empty lots
    As the corner of michigan and 31st waits in ruin
    And the echoes of happy shoppers faded long, long, long ago
    Back when chrysler, gm and ford went mad with greed

    Oh, how we hoped it would turn out right
    Going back to detroit

    Kid could ride his bike through any neighborhood in town
    No fear of getting jacked for his sneakers
    Drive-bys only happened to the purple gang
    Back before the rebellion of '67

    Still we dreamed it could turn out right
    Movin back to detroit
    Drove down from st. claire, took all night
    Going back to detroit

    From east grand boulevard to michigan and 31st
    Over to livernois and warren
    And then the upper duplex of elmer and mcgraw street
    And then the big move to our own whole house in lincoln park
    Which shattered into a rental in taylor
    And the endless search for the great good place
    Was redeemed by the power of loud electric guitars

    Up the river it's all forests and secret trails
    And forts and swamps and dogs and boats
    And the day held a million adventures for a boy of seven
    But that was before the time of later ghosts

    Lost paradise left behind
    Huck finn hits the steets and the neon light
    Hope against hope it'll turn out right
    Going back to detroit.
    Drove down from algonac, took all night
    Going back to detroit

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0G4ZuoRDlY

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    Senior Member Bella's Avatar
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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    The Heidelberg Project

    The Heidelberg Project, bearing the name of the street on which it exists, was started in 1986 by Tyree Guyton. He was assisted by his grandfather, Sam (Grandpa) Mackey (deceased), and his former wife, Karen Guyton. Tyree was raised on Heidelberg Street and, at the age of 12, witnessed the tragic effect of the Detroit riots - from which he claims the City of Detroit never recovered. Though once racially integrated, many neighborhoods have become segregated urban ghettos characterized by poverty, abandonment, and despair.


    Armed with a paintbrush, a broom, and neighborhood children, Guyton, Karen, and Grandpa began by cleaning up vacant lots on Heidelberg and Elba Streets.  From the refuse they collected, Guyton began to transform the street into a massive art environment. Vacant lots literally became “lots of art” and abandoned houses became “gigantic art sculptures.” Guyton not only transformed vacant houses and lots, he integrated the street, sidewalks, and trees into his mammoth installation and called his work, "The Heidelberg Project", after it's location on Heidelberg Street.
    Despite numerous awards, the city demolished parts of the Heidelberg Project installation in 1991 and again in 1999. Still, the Heidelberg Project continues to exist, evolve, and grow - providing hope and inspiration to the local community and the community of the world.


    Today the Heidelberg Project is recognized as one of the most influential art environments in the world.


    http://www.heidelberg.org/









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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    Hey Bella, How about Belle Isle?  The giant fountain there, the botanical garden, the aquarium that closed?  Too this day it is just a shell of what it used to be.

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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    [quote author=garygnu link=topic=24044.msg1526736#msg1526736 date=1265238155]
    Hey Bella, How about Belle Isle?  The giant fountain there, the botanical garden, the aquarium that closed?  Too this day it is just a shell of what it used to be.
    [/quote]


    Belle Isle always reminds me of this article. I need to find some flattering pictures instead of another horror story.


    A Woman's Plunge to Death Transfixes Detroit

    DETROIT, Aug. 22— Tearful and furious, Dortha Word slammed a clenched fist down onto the bridge's gray steel railing on Monday night as she pictured her daughter clinging to it desperately, before falling to her death in the broad Detroit River early Saturday morning.

    Then Mrs. Word turned and looked back across the bridge, across the lanes where the police said traffic had been backed up as her daughter, Deletha, 33, was pulled from her car after a minor accident, stripped of some or all of her clothes, and beaten before she jumped into the river to escape. All the while, about 40 people were looking on.

    "The ones who were standing and looking, they were just as guilty," said Mrs. Word, who came to the bridge to pray and remember Deletha.

    She said she thought she knew why they watched: "They like that kind of entertainment."

    Because of conflicting accounts, some details of Deletha Word's death are hazy. But despite the debate here were all her clothes torn off? did the onlookers cheer? -- one thing seems clear: No one intervened until Ms. Word, who could not swim, had vanished into the dark green water.

    The incident has transfixed Detroit, which has been trying to shake its image as a crime-ridden city. Ms. Word's death has made headlines for days and dominated television news as the police try to unravel the case. Today, prosecutors charged a 19-year-old college student with second-degree murder in her death; he has no criminal record.

    "There's a lot at stake in imagery here for the city of Detroit," Kevin Joyce, a talk-radio host on WJR, told his listeners this afternoon. "People wonder, 'Why don't suburbanites come downtown? Why don't business and industry want to pay for the privilege of investing downtown?' Stories like this scare people away."

    Some callers responded that such crimes happen everywhere. "People are really doing themselves in, not going down to Detroit," said a caller from the suburbs.

    Mrs. Word had more personal concerns as the sun set behind the city's skyline and she stood by the flowers, real and artificial, that friends and relatives had tied to the bridge's railing in memory of her daughter.

    She worried about Deletha's daughter, Daneeka Lamb, who is 13. She spoke of how Deletha worked at a Detroit grocery store, and how she dreamed of opening a clothing store after she earned her bachelor's degree next year from the Detroit College of Business. And she wondered again why, as the incident on the bridge escalated, no one stepped in.

    "That's the hard part for me," she said. "There's no way my daughter would have stood and watched that."

    Deletha was the second child Mrs. Word has lost this year. Her son, James, was shot to death in May.

    Today, Martel Welch Jr., neatly dressed in a khaki suit, pleaded not guilty as he was charged in 36th District Court in the death of Ms. Word. Judge Kerry Leon Jackson said one witness described Mr. Welch's picking up Ms. Word and threatening to throw her from the bridge; others said she jumped on her own. Because of the conflicting accounts, Judge Jackson said, he set bail at $250,000.

    At about 2:30 Saturday morning, Ms. Word was driving on Belle Isle, a large teardrop-shaped island park between Detroit and the Canadian shore where young people cruise on warm summer nights, listening to blaring music. According to the police, she struck Mr. Welch's car and, without stopping, drove onto the stately General MacArthur Bridge, which connects the park and the city.

    Mr. Welch, with two passengers in his car, gave chase, catching up to Ms. Word in the traffic on the bridge. She then backed into his car, the police said.

    Before dozens of witnesses, Mr. Welch dragged Ms. Word from her car and beat her with his hands, said Deputy Chief Benny N. Napoleon of the Detroit Police Department.

    Citing the accounts of witnesses, Mr. Napoleon said that as one of Mr. Welch's companions held Ms. Word, Mr. Welch smashed her car windows with a tire iron. Mr. Napoleon said Ms. Word broke away and jumped into the river to escape.

    The police said earlier that two onlookers jumped in after her to try to save her.

    The police have requested an autopsy and toxicology tests on Ms. Word, Deputy Chief Napoleon said.

    Richard Padzieski, chief of operations for the Wayne County Prosecutor's office, said Mr. Welch had been charged with second-degree murder because he created a "dangerous situation" that led to Ms. Word's death.

    But a lawyer for Mr. Welch said that while he did chase Ms. Word in his car, he did not cause her to jump in the river. The lawyer, Wanda R. Cal, said some of the 40 or more onlookers blocked her escape and threatened her.

    "I think she was intimidated by the large number of people in the crowd," Ms. Cal said. "I don't think she singled out my client."

    Mr. Welch works full time in maintenance at a hospital, Ms. Cal said. An architectural design student, he planned to enroll as a sophomore at Eastern Michigan University in the fall, having completed his freshman year at Wayne State University here.

    Rare but sensational crimes have a way of dogging Detroit, where residents worry openly and often about the city's tattered national image. "Say Nice Things About Detroit!" reads a sign outside a downtown pizzeria. Many hope fluttering signs of economic recovery and a declining murder rate herald a turnaround under the leadership of an aggressive and popular new Mayor, Dennis Archer.

    But last week a man was arrested and accused of using Krazy Glue to seal his 5-year-old daughter's eyes. Then Ms. Word was attacked. Her body was found later Saturday morning about 10 miles down river from the bridge. She had drowned, according to the medical examiner's office. One of her legs had been cut off, apparently by a boat's propeller.

    Photos: Deletha Word, 33, whose death has transfixed Detroit. After she was involved in a traffic accident early Saturday, she was chased into a river as people watched. (Associated Press); Martel Welch Jr., 19, yesterday as he was charged with second-degree murder in the death of Deletha Word. Mr. Welch pleaded not guilty in a Detroit courtroom and his bail was set at $250,000. (Associated Press)(pg. A18); Dortha Word, with her head down, prayed with friends yesterday at the bridge where her daughter died. (Steve Nickerson/The Detroit Free Press)(pg. A1)

    http://www.nytimes.com/1995/08/23/us...l?pagewanted=1

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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.

    Belle Isle and the bridge





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    Re: The Tragedy of Detroit. Time Magazine Cover Story.




    The biggest display in North America.


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