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Detroit is edging dangerously close to bankruptcy, and the most obvious sign of its dramatic financial downfall lies in the ramshackle, abandoned homes that dot its neighborhoods. Michigan Gov ...
Further compounding Detroit’s problems was the fact that despite large decreases in population, its area remained unchanged, stretching thin municipal services. [2] High rates of housing vacancies in turn lead to large tracts of urban space marked by deteriorating buildings and associated with high poverty and crime rates.
This category is for buildings and structures in Detroit, Michigan that were demolished. Pages in category "Demolished buildings and structures in Detroit" The following 46 pages are in this category, out of 46 total.
Residents of Detroit's newly revitalized Brush Park are objecting to the latest plan for more low-income housing in their neighborhood. ... Some have paid well over $500,000 for homes — even $1 ...
Tiny Homes Detroit is a development of small, one- and two-person tiny homes constructed for low-income tenants by Cass Community Social Services. The development is located on Elmhurst, Monterey and Richton Street, [1] between Woodrow Wilson and the Lodge Freeway in Detroit. The Lodge Freeway is one of the most trafficked freeways in the Motor ...
The couple had purchased a dilapidated two-story townhouse in Detroit (pictured at left) for $500 at a tax auction in October 2012. They had planned to entirely renovate the home so they could ...
From historic marker on the site of Brewster Homes. Between 1910 and 1940 Detroit, Michigan's African American population increased dramatically. In 1935, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt broke ground for the Brewster Homes, the nation’s first federally funded public housing development for African Americans. The homes opened in 1938 with 701 units.
A lot has changed in downtown Detroit since two childhood friends returned home to Michigan 30 years ago to open McIntosh Poris Architects.