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  2. A Detroit woman bought 8 fixer-upper properties in the 'most ...

    www.aol.com/finance/detroit-woman-bought-8-fixer...

    Buying cheap real estate doesn't guarantee you'll turn a profit. ... with homes selling for as little as $1,000. ... Detroit's real estate boom helped fuel this success. The median price plummeted ...

  3. '100 Abandoned Houses': Sad Signs of Detroit's Growing ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2013-03-05-100-abandoned-houses...

    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 ...

  4. Bishop Mansion, largest private residence in Detroit, sees $2 ...

    www.aol.com/bishop-mansion-largest-private...

    The largest private residence in Detroit by square footage, at more than 33,000-square feet, has undergone a significant price reduction of $2 million recently.

  5. Jeffries Projects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffries_Projects

    The Jeffries Homes, also called the Jeffries Housing Projects, was a public housing project located in Detroit, Michigan, near the Lodge Freeway.It included 13 high-rises and hundreds of row house units, and was named for Detroit Recorder's Court Judge Edward J. Jeffries, Sr., who was also father of Detroit Mayor Edward J. Jeffries, Jr.

  6. Dorothy H. Turkel House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_H._Turkel_House

    The Dorothy H. Turkel House is a private residence located at 2760 West 7 Mile Road in north-central Detroit, Michigan, within the Palmer Woods neighborhood. It was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and completed in 1956. [1] The Dorothy H. Turkel House is the only Wright-designed building within the city limits of Detroit. [1]

  7. Brewster-Douglass Housing Projects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brewster-Douglass_Housing...

    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.

  8. Less than zero: Lots of Detroit properties worth even less ...

    www.aol.com/news/2008-08-14-less-than-zero-lots...

    You might blame the fact that houses in Detroit's drug war-torn neighborhoods are going for $1 (plus closing costs and thousands in back taxes) on the foreclosure crisis, but the reality is ...

  9. Sojourner Truth Project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sojourner_Truth_Project

    As a strikingly controversial project in 1941, Sojourner Truth Project set precedents for Detroit housing project policy through the next decade. Created by the Detroit Housing Commission (DHC) and United States Housing Authority (USHA), the proposed 200 units would alleviate housing shortages caused by the wartime climate of World War II.