Sunday, November 18, 2012

Motown Historic Building To Be Torn Down




( Associated Press ) - FILE - In this Aug. 19, 1966 file photo, members of the Motown singing group The Supremes are shown. Diana Ross, lead singer, is on top of the slide, Mary Wilson, hangs on the ladder, right and Florence Ballard, stands under the slide. Ross and the Supremes lived in Detroit’s Brewster projects. Mayor Dave Bing has called a news conference Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, to announce plans for the long-vacant projects, which he said in March that he wanted to demolish by year’s end.
  • ( Associated Press ) - FILE -
                In this Aug. 19, 1966 file photo, members of the Motown
                singing group The Supremes are shown. Diana Ross, lead
                singer, is on top of the slide, Mary Wilson, hangs on
                the ladder, right and Florence Ballard, stands under the
                slide. Ross and the Supremes lived in Detroit’s Brewster
                projects. Mayor Dave Bing has called a news conference
                Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, to announce plans for the
                long-vacant projects, which he said in March that he
                wanted to demolish by year’s end.
  • (Detroit News, Max Ortiz/
                Associated Press ) - Detroit Mayor Dave Bing announces
                the demolition of the Frederick Douglass Homes housing
                project on Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012 in Detroit. Bing says
                police and firefighters frequently respond to reports of
                crime and arson in the complex, and that demolishing it
                will allow scant city emergency resources to be deployed
                elsewhere. He said that the yearlong demolition and
                cleanup will be paid for by a $6.5 million federal
                Housing and Urban Development grant. The city has no set
                plans for redevelopment of the complex known as the
                Brewster projects, where a young Diana Ross and the
                Supremes spent some of their pre-Motown years. Past
                proposals have included a mix of new homes and retail
                establishments.

    Vacant housing project where Diana Ross, Supremes lived before Motown stardom coming down

  • (Detroit News, Max Ortiz/
                Associated Press ) - The media stands outside the
                Frederick Douglass Homes housing project on Thursday,
                Nov. 15, 2012 in Detroit. Detroit Mayor Dave Bing
                announced the demolition of the Frederick Douglass Homes
                housing project on Thursday. Bing says police and
                firefighters frequently respond to reports of crime and
                arson in the complex, and that demolishing it will allow
                scant city emergency resources to be deployed elsewhere.
                He said that the yearlong demolition and cleanup will be
                paid for by a $6.5 million federal Housing and Urban
                Development grant. The city has no set plans for
                redevelopment of the complex known as the Brewster
                projects, where a young Diana Ross and the Supremes
                spent some of their pre-Motown years. Past proposals
                have included a mix of new homes and retail
                establishments.
  • (Detroit News, Max Ortiz/
                Associated Press ) - Debris line one of the apartments
                at the Frederick Douglass Homes housing project on
                Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012 in Detroit. Detroit Mayor Dave
                Bing announced the demolition of the Frederick Douglass
                Homes housing project on Thursday. Bing says police and
                firefighters frequently respond to reports of crime and
                arson in the complex, and that demolishing it will allow
                scant city emergency resources to be deployed elsewhere.
                He said that the yearlong demolition and cleanup will be
                paid for by a $6.5 million federal Housing and Urban
                Development grant. The city has no set plans for
                redevelopment of the complex known as the Brewster
                projects, where a young Diana Ross and the Supremes
                spent some of their pre-Motown years. Past proposals
                have included a mix of new homes and retail
                establishments.
  • (Paul Sancya/ Associated Press ) -
                Part of the Brewster-Douglass housing project site is
                shown in Detroit, Friday, March 18, 2011. If Detroit
                Housing Commission director Eugene Jones had his way the
                “for sale” sign he’d post off Interstates 75 and 375
                would read: “14 acres of prime real estate between the
                city’s resurgent downtown and promising Midtown. A steal
                at $9 million. Will accept reasonable offer.” Real
                offers have been few. One arts group proposal to hang
                junked cars from windows in one the Brewster-Douglass
                housing project’s empty 14-story towers was declined.
                Unlike cities like Chicago, where the last building in
                notorious Cabrini-Green public housing complex was razed
                within months of the final family moving out,
                Brewster-Douglass has been empty for two years and none
                of the 20 brick buildings has been torn down. Neither
                the city nor Jones’ commission has the money to demolish
                the complex which is beginning to rival the long-empty,
                17-story Michigan Central Depot as another symbol of
                Detroit’s decay.
  • (Paul Sancya/ Associated Press ) -
                Part of the Brewster-Douglass housing project site is
                shown in Detroit, Friday, March 18, 2011. If Detroit
                Housing Commission director Eugene Jones had his way the
                “for sale” sign he’d post off Interstates 75 and 375
                would read: “14 acres of prime real estate between the
                city’s resurgent downtown and promising Midtown. A steal
                at $9 million. Will accept reasonable offer.” Real
                offers have been few. One arts group proposal to hang
                junked cars from windows in one the Brewster-Douglass
                housing project’s empty 14-story towers was declined.
                Unlike cities like Chicago, where the last building in
                notorious Cabrini-Green public housing complex was razed
                within months of the final family moving out,
                Brewster-Douglass has been empty for two years and none
                of the 20 brick buildings has been torn down. Neither
                the city nor Jones’ commission has the money to demolish
                the complex which is beginning to rival the long-empty,
                17-story Michigan Central Depot as another symbol of
                Detroit’s decay.

Covering several city blocks, the complex bathes part of downtown and surrounding neighborhoods in shadow and fear and is a symbol of the city’s decline.
A $6.5 million federal Housing and Urban Development grant will cover the cost of tearing down the 75 condo-style apartments, two 6-story buildings and four 14-story towers. Soil remediation — the removal of any below-ground pollution — is included in that tally.
“It’s going to take us, probably, the better part of a year to get everything down,” the mayor told reporters at a news conference in front of the hulking complex. “This total area will be cleaned up.”
The city has no set plans for redevelopment of the complex where a young Diana Ross, Florence Ballard and Mary Wilson lived before signing with Berry Gordy’s Motown Records in the early 1960s. Past proposals have included a mix of new homes and retail establishments.
“I know there’s a lot of history here. I’m sure some people may even think that it shouldn’t come down,” Bing said. “But as we look at changing the face of Detroit, this is going to start with this.
“It’s become an eyesore. We’ve got to think about now and our future. Our future is demolishing this.”
The 2010 census confirmed what many Detroiters already knew: thousands of people have migrated from the city in recent years. Some 30,000 homes stand vacant and abandoned buildings litter the once-thriving industrial center.
The Frederick Douglass Homes was not always one of the blots on the landscape. Formerly known as the Brewster-Douglass housing project, the 661 units were completed in the early 1950s to provide affordable homes for working-class people.
The last families were vacated in 2008 by the Detroit Housing Commission as conditions in the buildings became unsafe. Though it’s empty now, the complex is frequently visited by police and firefighters responding to reports of crime and arson.
By tearing the buildings down and clearing the land, the city’s scant emergency resources can be deployed elsewhere, Bing said.
Adjacent to the unfenced housing project is a senior citizens complex. Some children in the surrounding neighborhood have to navigate their way past on their way to school.
“We have big concerns in regard to our children being harmed or snatched up from people who are lurking in these buildings,” said Brush Park Citizens District Council chair Mona Gardner. “It’s not secure.”

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