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  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2009
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    Default Livernois and McNichols

    One of the debates on this forum was the downtown/Midtown vs. the neighborhoods. Or the 'what about the neighborhoods?' posts. There are a lot of innovative things happenings in the neighborhoods. This neighborhood is by UDM.

    Well, the theme of this article is that neighborhoods can come back and they don't need to be adjacent to downtown to do it or get the love and attention to make it happen.

    This program sounds kind of like a 'business improvement district' where monies are raised to improve a particular area with things like streetscaping, etc. [[monies separate from the a governmental unit).

    http://www.detroitnews.com/story/bus...hols/71484840/

    In Detroit, lights are coming on in the neighborhoods. M-1 is coming. New Center appears to be coming back.

    We have one thread about Quicken Loans/Home Depot trying help selective neighborhoods get better.

    The side lots program thread theme was that some strong neighborhoods can get much better by having a program which turns vacant lots into a +, not a -.

    There are no magic bullets to revitalize a city the geographic size of Detroit. It will be done block by block, neighborhood by neighborhood...
    Last edited by emu steve; September-01-15 at 05:26 AM.

  2. #2

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    I used too grew up around the Livernois-McNichols area when I was born 1977 and was raised there until 1985. University of Detroit Mercy was an open college. They were thriving businesses just north of the campus and west of McNichols Rd. It was close to Avenue of Fashion Commercial District. Any businesses south of U of D Mercy is started to be torn up when lots of low-come welfare and food stamp folks moved in. When the crackheads from Highland Park started to migrate to my community U of D Mercy started to fortified the campus. They closed of Florence St. from Livernois Rd. to Fairfield St. and brought most of the land where Brent Hospital Building once stood. There are frat housing on Fairfield St. as long as those frat boys don't disturb the neighborhoods. The sub-divisions of University District, Palmer Park, Martin Park, Bagley and Pilgrim Village was very beautiful at my time. Now its all ghetto-like doesn't matter what those neighborhoods look like. It can drive or cruise those through the Detroit ghetto-hood ans see the homes are well kept up. But as you go further inside, folks that want to be bothered, doing drugs and hoodies watching folks ready to rob, shoot and kill.
    Last edited by Danny; September-01-15 at 10:11 AM.

  3. #3

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    This area will only take off once restaurants/retail that is world class and only available there comes in. Having a CVS, a Dollar Tree and a Chase bank with landscaping and lights won't pull in anyone.

    The reason Midtown/Downtown are coming back so strong is because there is Jolly Pumpkin, Shinola, Hopcat, Townhouse, Cafe D Mongo, Cliff Bells, Bucharest - not because there is CVS, Tim Hortons or Flagstar Bank. When you have visitors in town - you have a place to take them to have a good time.

    Kuzzo's Chicken and Waffles and 1917 are a great start. Get 3-5 more world class businesses, whatever they may be and people will drive to check it out. That spurs more development.

  4. #4

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    Quote Originally Posted by belleislerunner View Post
    This area will only take off once restaurants/retail that is world class and only available there comes in. Having a CVS, a Dollar Tree and a Chase bank with landscaping and lights won't pull in anyone.
    I doubt anyone thinks 6 Mile and Livernois is going to take off in that sense. It doesn't need world-class anything. It needs to be able to attract the people in the surrounding neighborhoods. It wasn't a strong shopping area 50 years ago, but it did have more businesses catering to the students and the locals, and also businesses that were less depressed-looking.

    Kuzzo's Chicken and Waffles and 1917 are a great start. Get 3-5 more world class businesses, whatever they may be and people will drive to check it out. That spurs more development.
    Those are both north of 7, nearly a mile north of the north end of this district at Curtis. I wouldn't call either of them world-class either, but they do seem reasonably popular. I see big lines at Kuzzo's on the weekend.

  5. #5

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    Quote Originally Posted by belleislerunner View Post
    This area will only take off once restaurants/retail that is world class and only available there comes in. Having a CVS, a Dollar Tree and a Chase bank with landscaping and lights won't pull in anyone.

    The reason Midtown/Downtown are coming back so strong is because there is Jolly Pumpkin, Shinola, Hopcat, Townhouse, Cafe D Mongo, Cliff Bells, Bucharest - not because there is CVS, Tim Hortons or Flagstar Bank. When you have visitors in town - you have a place to take them to have a good time.

    Kuzzo's Chicken and Waffles and 1917 are a great start. Get 3-5 more world class businesses, whatever they may be and people will drive to check it out. That spurs more development.
    Notice that ghetto-hoods that surround U of D mercy is mostly black. Middle income folks live mostly in Bagley, University and Palmer Park areas. Low income-welfare and foodstamp folks live mostly south of Puritan from Pilgrim Village to James Couzens area. Fenkell and Livernois was once a beautiful commercial district. The 1975 mini-riot destroyed to nothingless by the 1980s.

    Exotic businesses in Midtown survived due to older generation of property owners value historical buildings. Wayne State University and its preservationists want to keep all of its campuses open and gate free. the luring of ethnic folks leads to demand of housing. University of Detroit is not going to planning to break down the gates and open its property to anyone. Security is their primary concern. The campus was open to all public a long time ago when the neighborhood was a real neighborhood. The was filled with middle to blue collar 100% white people. It lasted to the early 1960s the middle income black families from Detroit's West Side migrated to those areas. Then low-income, poor and DEAD [[C)KRAK HEADS come in since the early 1980s.

    If Dan Gilbert and his Quicken Loan Gang decided they want to create exotic businesses and rehab Detroit dwellings. He will do it by any means necessary. It the end, property values will go up, landlords will have raise the rent and low-income folks will have to move out.

  6. #6

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    If Dan Gilbert and his Quicken Loan Gang decided they want to create exotic businesses and rehab Detroit dwellings. He will do it by any means necessary. It the end, property values will go up, landlords will have raise the rent and low-income folks will have to move out.[/QUOTE]

    I'd be curious in five years, [[2020) to see an analysis of where everyone who lived in Detroit from 1990-2010 now lived. The outmigration clearly hasn't gone to Macomb or Oakland County, though definitely a few thousand here/there have moved in. It's almost as if everyone who didn't have a job or lost their house moved out of state and started elsewhere, likely in the southern states [[e.g. North Carolina, S. Carolina, Georgia, Arizona, Florida, Texas). With the advent of social media, it's much easier to "stay connected" even while living afar.

    I ask because unemployment levels have now bounced back to the pre-recessions levels so, for most people, live has returned to normal. There is no longer any "bad economy" in Michigan, so what became of everyone whose homes turned into urban farms. The areas around Dequindre/McNichols, or City Airport, or Westphalia/7 Mile. Has there been a mass influx of displaced Detroiters around the country, akin to Katrina/New Orleans?

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
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    5,067

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by belleislerunner View Post
    I'd be curious in five years, [[2020) to see an analysis of where everyone who lived in Detroit from 1990-2010 now lived. The outmigration clearly hasn't gone to Macomb or Oakland County, though definitely a few thousand here/there have moved in. It's almost as if everyone who didn't have a job or lost their house moved out of state and started elsewhere, likely in the southern states [[e.g. North Carolina, S. Carolina, Georgia, Arizona, Florida, Texas).
    It's sometimes like DYes exists in an alternate universe, where facts are of no consequence.

    Back in the real world, former Detroiters are mostly in Oakland or Macomb counties, or somewhere in the region. No, they aren't in Arizona. Every other person in the region has roots in Detroit. This is even more true for blacks [[who are 90% of the people living in and leaving Detroit). Very few blacks in Arizona.

  8. #8

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    Quote Originally Posted by belleislerunner View Post
    If Dan Gilbert and his Quicken Loan Gang decided they want to create exotic businesses and rehab Detroit dwellings. He will do it by any means necessary. It the end, property values will go up, landlords will have raise the rent and low-income folks will have to move out.
    I have asked myself the same question. Here are a couple of ideas:

    1. Lots of people are living in their brother-in-law's basement. I mean a LOT. I wouldn't even be surprised to find out that the population of Detroit is actually much higher than 700,000, since plenty of people would have held back census data that showed that multiple families were living in one house. I see it on my block, and I see it in my family.

    2. Apartment rents rose during the recession [[that is assuming that Michigan is actually OUT of the recession), and have stayed on the high end. This reflects a high demand for rental units. Rent is still cheap compared to other cities in most of Detroit, but it is high for this region.

    I take a different view of where we are than most people. If you look downtown and the other hot areas, I think what you see happening is what is happening all across the nation. Central cities are becoming more expensive, gentrified, and exclusive. The pattern is the same, but it is hidden in the "narrative" people have about what they think is happening in Detroit. As much as people talk about schools and crime and taxes, Detroit is going through the same thing other cities are going through: gaining gentrification, pushing out less-wealthy to the suburbs. Like every other change in Detroit, it was slow to start, but once it really gets moving, our heads will spin.

  9. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by belleislerunner View Post
    This area will only take off once restaurants/retail that is world class and only available there comes in. Having a CVS, a Dollar Tree and a Chase bank with landscaping and lights won't pull in anyone.

    The reason Midtown/Downtown are coming back so strong is because there is Jolly Pumpkin, Shinola, Hopcat, Townhouse, Cafe D Mongo, Cliff Bells, Bucharest - not because there is CVS, Tim Hortons or Flagstar Bank. When you have visitors in town - you have a place to take them to have a good time.

    Kuzzo's Chicken and Waffles and 1917 are a great start. Get 3-5 more world class businesses, whatever they may be and people will drive to check it out. That spurs more development.
    I'm not much of a fan of Dollar Tree and that type of store, but a nice tidy and well landscaped CVS or Tim Hortons or Chase Bank? What's wrong with that? I think providing basic retail and services for the surrounding area is the first step. Attracting folks from outside the area is of less importance for a neighborhood retail district.

    Further up Livernois, perhaps things could once again be a bit more upscale or unique.

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by DetroiterOnTheWestCoast View Post
    I'm not much of a fan of Dollar Tree and that type of store, but a nice tidy and well landscaped CVS or Tim Hortons or Chase Bank? What's wrong with that? I think providing basic retail and services for the surrounding area is the first step. Attracting folks from outside the area is of less importance for a neighborhood retail district.

    Further up Livernois, perhaps things could once again be a bit more upscale or unique.
    Yeah, people who actually live in a neighborhood are going to patronize a CVS or a bank or a Tim Horton's more often than a pricy restaurant or a store that sells expensive watches. When I look at a neighborhood as a potential place to buy a home, I am more interested in where I'm going to buy my groceries than in hipster tourist attractions.

  11. #11

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    Quote Originally Posted by Danny View Post
    I was born 1977 to 1985.
    damn dude, that's one hell of a lengthy labor.

  12. #12

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    Quote Originally Posted by ggores View Post
    damn dude, that's one hell of a lengthy labor.
    Mom must have been exhausted......

  13. #13

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    Quote Originally Posted by ggores View Post
    damn dude, that's one hell of a lengthy labor.
    He went from the maternity ward to second grade.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    May 2009
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    3,501

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by iheartthed View Post
    He went from the maternity ward to second grade.
    Or with such a long gestation, he really was a momma's boy. Lot of bonding going on in there. Lol.

  15. #15

    Default

    As for the street scape, well, they've been digging up the ill-advised median and landscaping all spring and summer, only 5 years after putting it in. I guess they forgot lighting.

    Livernois as it is now, is relatively desolate on the west side all the way from the Lodge to Curtis. The east side fares a little better. It would be nice to see that area W of Livernois to Marygrove look like something, then again, it took 30 years to look like it does now.

    Keep concentrating on the 7 Mile / Livernois area, which looks so much better than even 4 years ago. If University District is able to stop the bleeding, that neighborhood has some of the most affordable beautiful housing stock in the city, are slightly smaller and newer than Boston Edison, and relatively close to Woodward. The latest round of foreclosures here last fall/winter/spring has kept prices relatively deflated. Parts of Parkside and Wildemere are looking a little rough around the edges.

  16. #16

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    Quote Originally Posted by Hamtragedy View Post
    If University District is able to stop the bleeding, that neighborhood has some of the most affordable beautiful housing stock in the city, are slightly smaller and newer than Boston Edison, and relatively close to Woodward. The latest round of foreclosures here last fall/winter/spring has kept prices relatively deflated. Parts of Parkside and Wildemere are looking a little rough around the edges.
    Agree about the nice housing stock, but as far as I can see, prices in the University District are rising at an unreasonable rate. I agree that there are still a bunch of foreclosures that need to be cleaned up before there will be a clear idea of appropriate pricing. On the other hand, I can't say that that I see Parkside and Wildemere looking much different than any of the other streets.

  17. #17

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hamtragedy View Post
    As for the street scape, well, they've been digging up the ill-advised median and landscaping all spring and summer, only 5 years after putting it in. I guess they forgot lighting.

    Livernois as it is now, is relatively desolate on the west side all the way from the Lodge to Curtis. The east side fares a little better. It would be nice to see that area W of Livernois to Marygrove look like something, then again, it took 30 years to look like it does now.

    Keep concentrating on the 7 Mile / Livernois area, which looks so much better than even 4 years ago. If University District is able to stop the bleeding, that neighborhood has some of the most affordable beautiful housing stock in the city, are slightly smaller and newer than Boston Edison, and relatively close to Woodward. The latest round of foreclosures here last fall/winter/spring has kept prices relatively deflated. Parts of Parkside and Wildemere are looking a little rough around the edges.
    You say "stop the bleeding" in the U district, What do you mean by that? There are some beautiful homes there, a uncle of mine lives there. Are foreclosures and empty homes on the rise or what?

  18. #18

    Default

    Diversify the restaurants. Indian cuisine. Korean cuisine. Mediterranean/Arab cuisine. How about a dance teaching studio?
    Last edited by Hypestyles; September-01-15 at 11:26 AM.

  19. #19

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    Quote Originally Posted by Hypestyles View Post
    Diversify the restaurants. Indian cuisine. Korean cuisine. Mediterranean/Arab cuisine. How about a dance teaching studio?
    Bring back the Varsity Theatre, although Ray36 and I are probably the only ones who remember it. Great little place.

  20. #20

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    Quote Originally Posted by the rock View Post
    Bring back the Varsity Theatre, although Ray36 and I are probably the only ones who remember it. Great little place.
    I remember it, but neighborhood movie theatres aren't really a thing anymore. I was sad when it was demolished though--what is there now is fast food places and parking. I also used to bowl at Varsity Lanes, which is long-gone although it lasted a lot longer than the theatre.

  21. #21

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    Quote Originally Posted by the rock View Post
    Bring back the Varsity Theatre, although Ray36 and I are probably the only ones who remember it. Great little place.
    Bring back the Royal [[seven mile) and the Mercury [[Schaefer) while you're at it.

  22. #22

    Default

    UDM and Marygrove need to become less of commuter schools. One of the biggest factors in the turnaround in Midtown was a big increase in WSU students housing. That put more wallets in the area which attracted more businesses and we know the rest of the story. How and where that will happen is an issue given their small campuses and lack of large surrounding vacant parcels.

  23. #23

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    Quote Originally Posted by MSUguy View Post
    UDM and Marygrove need to become less of commuter schools. One of the biggest factors in the turnaround in Midtown was a big increase in WSU students housing. That put more wallets in the area which attracted more businesses and we know the rest of the story. How and where that will happen is an issue given their small campuses and lack of large surrounding vacant parcels.
    hmm are there any abandoned apartment buildings near the campus that the school can buy?

  24. #24
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hypestyles View Post
    hmm are there any abandoned apartment buildings near the campus that the school can buy?
    It's a suburban neighborhood. There are apartment buildings in NW Detroit, but they are generally postwar, garden-style buildings, further west, along Greenfield and near Telegraph. I doubt there would be many in proximity to UDM or Marygrove, and it isn't clear why they would need such housing, given that both schools are underenrolled and have excess on-campus capacity.

  25. #25

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    Let's say the population of Detroit in 2000 was 1 million. Let's say it is now 700K. Let's say the population mix of Detroit proper has remained constant at 85% black.

    Please identify which suburbs of Detroit have grown by 300K black people, since 2000, to support your assertion that everyone, or even most, have stayed here.

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