It actually did have that feel during the Winter Blast that they had 
downtown right after all that snow, the skating that was so full they 
started having a schedule, and the huge slide made entirely of snow. It 
was super crowded but entirely too damn cold. I brought the kiddies down 
there but they only lasted about an hour in the frigid conditions.

Peace,
Alex



"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
02/04/2005 12:55 PM

To
"Gerald" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <313@hyperreal.org>
cc

Subject
Re: (313) Detroit in Motion!






"Specifically, where a once-ominous and 

deserted nighttime downtown core is transformed into a teeming weekend 

winter wonderland. The type that's full of families in matching puffy 
coats

and gaggles of teens cautiously eyeing each other over hot chocolates like 


something out of a 21st-century Norman Rockwell painting. "



WHAT?!!!  Is this the same Detroit we are talking about? 



~David



---------- Original Message -------------

Subject: (313) Detroit in Motion!

Date: Fri, 4 Feb 2005 12:38:03 -0500

From: "Gerald" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: <313@hyperreal.org>





A friend of mine posted this article from the Globe & Mail (a Toronto 
Based 

newspaper) the other day.



OT - but kinda funny reading this - seeing as how there has been a bevy of 


posts on the 'Crisis in Detroit' recently.





After decades of neglect, the city once known for packing heat is now 

generating some. Downtown buildings are being resurrected, eclectic 
eateries 

are springing up and the city has landed next year's Super Bowl. DOMINIC 

PATTEN goes exploring



By DOMINIC PATTEN

Special to The Globe and Mail

Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - Page R10



As you chill the beer and open your dip and hips in preparation for 
watching 

this year's Super Bowl from Jacksonville, Fla., just take a moment to 
think 

about miracles. And I'm not talking about the Philadelphia Eagles 
defeating 

the odds-on favourites and defending champions, the New England Patriots.



I'm talking about urban miracles. Specifically, where a once-ominous and 

deserted nighttime downtown core is transformed into a teeming weekend 

winter wonderland. The type that's full of families in matching puffy 
coats 

and gaggles of teens cautiously eyeing each other over hot chocolates like 


something out of a 21st-century Norman Rockwell painting. That's what it 
was 

like at downtown Detroit's new Campus Martius Park for the very first 
Motown 

Winter Blast this year.



After decades of neglect and disrepair, the city that was once best known 

for packing heat is now generating some. "Detroit is a city undergoing a 

renaissance," Jennifer Granholm, the Vancouver-born governor of Michigan, 

said in an interview, "and now is the time to see it."



The city has become a burgeoning dining, sporting, entertainment and 

cultural centre. In recent years, Detroit has turned things around, 
building 

on the best of its past and betting on the future, and even landing Super 

Bowl XL in 2006.



Three casinos have opened in the city since 1999 and big business has 

returned. Many of the former ruins of Detroit -- the warehouses, factories 


and corporate headquarters -- have been turned into either retail stores 
or 

high-end lofts for the affluent professionals moving back downtown. New 

stadiums, hotels, clubs and restaurants have also opened their doors and 

flourished.



It's not the first time the city locals call "the D" glittered so 
brightly. 

As recently as the 1950s, when it boomed with the wealth of the auto 

industry, Detroit had it all. But cities, like heavyweight champions, 
never 

stay on top forever and even the Big Three couldn't withstand the riots of 


the 1960s, the flight of the middle class to the suburbs, the decimation 
of 

the manufacturing and tax base, and soaring crime rates that consistently 

saw Detroit labelled "the most dangerous city in America."



For years, the city virtually turned a blind eye to the urban blight that 

dominated downtown. Vandalism and squalor occupied many buildings. In 
1988, 

not a single construction permit was issued in Detroit. For a city that 
was 

once renowned for its stunning architectural vista, it was a burnt-out 
husk



"We all know the decline of the city didn't happen overnight," said Susan 

Sherer, the executive director of Detroit's Super Bowl Committee, "and it 

can't be fixed overnight, but there's a lot we've done, and lots more we 
can 

do."



Slight good news came late last year when the annual City Crime Rankings 

publication, based on crime data reported to the Federal Bureau of 

Investigation in 2003, upgraded Detroit to the second-most dangerous city 
in 

America, after Camden, N.J. Better news, like the devil, is in the 
details. 

The ranking is based on all of Metro Detroit, and as police insist, 
violent 

crime and petty theft is significantly down, especially in the downtown 

core. "I would put our downtown up against any downtown across the world," 


Second Deputy Police Chief James Tate said. "It is by far the safest place 


in the entire city."



This January, at the Motown Winter Blast, tens of thousands braved the 
cold 

and the downtown streets to take in dogsled rides and ice skating with 
local 

National Hockey League legends, as well as sample music and food from 
local 

performers and restaurants at Campus Martius Park. "We had around 250,000 

guests here for the Auto Show and the inaugural Winter Blast this year," 

Deputy Chief Tate said, "and not a single incident."



That's a good omen for the Super Bowl extravaganza next February when 
Motor 

City expects an estimated 150,000 visitors and 800 million television 

viewers. (As a process of continuing beautification, the city is trying to 


deal with its abandoned buildings by aggressively identifying absentee 

landlords and opening cafés and retail stores on the buildings' ground 

floors in the coming year. If that isn't an option, some will be draped in 


flags and façades: a temporary but cosmetic fix for a potential Super Bowl 


eyesore.)



The Winter Blast and this year's Auto Show were but a couple of the events 


going on in Detroit over the next 12 months and beyond.

In March, there's a vintage couture exhibition including outfits by design 


houses such as Balenciaga and Dior at the Henry Ford Museum. The Majestic 

Theater Center on Woodward Avenue, in the city's downtown cultural 
district, 

will be the place to be in April.



That's when Detroit -- the hometown of Motown, the MC5, hip-hop superstar 

Eminem and the White Stripes -- launches the Motor City Music Conference 

with performances from more than 400 national and local-based artists in 
40 

different venues throughout the city.



The block-long Majestic complex, whose art-deco façade has recently been 

renovated, has been at the heart of Detroit's music scene for years. Some 
of 

the conference attendees may grab a bite at the Majestic Café or the 

Pizzeria.



Most, however, will want to either take in a big show at the theatre 
itself 

or check out the action upstairs on stage at the Magic Stick.



The Red Wings are clipped right now because of the NHL lockout, but Major 

League baseball will play its annual All-Star Game in front of 40,000 fans 


at Comerica Park, the home of the Detroit Tigers, on July 12. With its 

Ferris wheel, pantheon of fame and giant Tigers pacing the rim of the 

multipurpose stadium, Comerica Park, which opened in 2000, is almost a 

bigger star than the players on its field.



The theory is that big ticket events, along with the return of 
corporations 

such as General Motors and Compuware, and their thousands of employees, 

provide fuel that's turning the downtown around. So, while the Pistons, 
the 

current National Basketball Association champions, actually play out in 

suburban Auburn Hills, top-notch hoops will return in 2008 and 2009 when 
the 

regional and Final Four tournaments of National Collegiate Athletic 

Association are held downtown. "Having the new dual stadiums of Comerica 

Park and Ford Field right downtown has spurred numerous bars, restaurants, 


housing and new business," said Mike Healy, a spokesman for the Detroit 

Tigers.



Just a few years ago, the downtown was so pockmarked that the best part of 


walking around was the dramatic steam from the manhole covers. Now, 
getting 

around the city has become more pleasant thanks to multimillion-dollar 

renovations that have widened downtown sidewalks and beautified them with 

benches and better lighting.



The opening of the magnificently resurrected 40-storey Guardian building 
on 

nearby Griswold Street and the illuminating glass of Compuware's 15-storey 


world headquarters brought a further injection of retailers, including 

Borders Books, into the city's core.



After years of looking like a bomb crater, Campus Martius Park, the city's 


flagship urban space, was finally finished. With its skating rink, indoor 

café and warming area, the park, unveiled in November, 2004, was another 

benchmark in bringing a healthy street life back to downtown.



"The city has always had a lot going on," said Robert Stanzler, owner of 
the 

internationally sold Made In Detroit clothing line. He has been selling 

T-shirts and jackets that proclaim "Detroit Muscle" for almost a decade. 

Almost two years ago, Stanzler opened his first store, in the Greektown 

neighbourhood. It has been a success and Stanzler thinks it has to do with 


the changing ethos of his town. "We needed to show some positive hometown 

pride, to show what a cool, what a historic and significant place this 
city 

is."



The resurrection of Detroit has as much to do with fixing the old as it 
has 

with building the new.



Four 19th-century mansions were renovated in 2000 to make up the Inn on 

Ferry Street. Surrounded by museums in the city's cultural centre, the inn 


recalls the vast wealth that once permeated Detroit. "The inn," it was 
noted 

when the establishment was given a National Preservation Award in 2002, 
"is 

a signal to Detroit that preservation is good for business and lays a 
strong 

foundation for the future."



A century or two away from the Inn on Ferry Street, the Renaissance Center 


has put paid to the notion that modernity can't be fixed. A critic once 

called the four soaring towers, which dominate views of the city, 
"fortress 

architecture that cities ought to shun."



Now, after an eight-year and $500-million surgery, the centre has turned 

into a swan. The worldwide headquarters of GM, the aptly named Renaissance 


has emerged with an inviting Jefferson Avenue pavilion, a car museum, 

restaurants, a shopping mall and a glass Winter Garden at the rear of the 

complex that looks out on to the city's recently completed scenic river 
walk 

and park.



Seldom Blues, located on the same level as the Marriott's main entrance, 

opened its doors and its kitchen in June, 2004. The combo of jazz club and 


sleek dining might not seem a natural jam, but, it works.

Fine feasting has become a growth industry in Detroit. There's still the 

four-diamond pleasures of Iridescence and the palatial luxury of the 

Whitney, but the city has seen over two dozen new restaurants open in the 

past few years.



Want to nibble? Hit Small Plates, where almost everything on the varied 
menu 

is a delicious appetizer. Want atmosphere and American fare? Go to 
Congress, 

the basement ultra-lounge that is part nightclub and part good eats. Want 

some delicacies and dancing? There's the Rhino @ Harmonie Park, a soulful 

hot spot with great lamb chops.



Detroit has also much to offer to the cultural traveller. The now-thriving 


theatre district has more seats than anywhere else in the United States 

except New York. At the Motown Historical Museum, you can stand where the 

Supremes, Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye recorded some of their best-known 

hits in Studio A. Or check out the ideals of arts and crafts at Pewabic 

Pottery or the healing power of song at the International Gospel Music 
Hall 

of Fame.



African Americans make up the majority of Detroit's population and the 

largest museum in the United States dedicated to their history is here. 
With 

Black History month upon us, the Charles W. Wright's permanent exhibition, 


And We Still Rise, which made its debut in November, and the travelling 

exhibition Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America, on display 

until Feb. 27, simultaneously reveal how far things have come and how far 

they still have to go.



Just up the street sits the Detroit Institute of Art. Though it's under 

renovation until 2007, the DIA is worth a visit. Auto fortunes brought the 


world's masterpieces to Detroit from ancient and rare Mesopotamian moulds 
to 

Chinese scholarly paintings to self-portraits by van Gogh and Warhol.



The most potent and localized gem in the collection is Mexican muralist 

Diego Rivera's Detroit Industry Frescoes. Nelson Rockefeller destroyed the 


Rivera mural his family commissioned in New York, but the auto barons 

ignored the artist's socialist subtext and revelled in his depiction of 
the 

physical power and design of their industry.



Visitors can glean some of Rivera's inspiration by taking a tour of the 
Ford 

Rouge Factory in nearby Dearborn. The muralist spent a month in 1932 

studying what was then the world's largest industrial complex, producing 

millions of cars a year. Tours were discontinued in the 1980s for safety 

reasons, but last May, after years of refurbishment under the supervision 
of 

Bill Ford, the great-grandson of Henry Ford, the plant, with a new 
visitors 

centre, was reopened.



The new Rouge tour provides a bird's-eye view of the assembly line in 

action. The films and guide lectures are suitably self-aggrandizing, but 

once you're in the actual factory, the rubber really hits the road. 

Strolling the catwalks is a bit like being inside the Death Star from the 

first Star Wars movie, but in a good way -- the beauty and functionality 
of 

the Rouge's industrial design was a model in efficiency.



After the Rouge, buses take you back to the Henry Ford Museum. The museum, 


which opened in 1929, is filled with a collection that could have been 

curated by Dr. Seuss. There is a vast array of trains (including the 
world's 

oldest surviving steam engine), planes and automobiles, including the car 

JFK was killed in. The Henry Ford also captures the highs and lows of 

American Exceptionalism with such vestiges as the chair that Abraham 
Lincoln 

was shot in and the bus that Rosa Parks refused to go sit at the back of.



In many ways, it's emblematic of the history of Detroit. The rise, the 

promise, the fall and the stubborn refusal to take it any more.



WHERE TO STAY

-Inn On Ferry Street: 84 East Ferry; 313-871-6000; 

http://www.ferrystreetinn.com. History meets modernity.

-The Marriot at the Renaissance Center: Renaissance Center; 313-568-8000; 

http://www.marriott.com. With its 73 floors and 1,300 rooms, it feels a 
bit 

like being on the set of a sophisticated sci-fi flick.



WHERE TO EAT

-Seldom Blues: 400 Renaissance Center; http://www.seldomblues.com; 

313-567-7301. Great vibe, jazz and views of the Detroit River.

-The Whitney: 4421 Woodward Ave.; http://www.thewhitney.com; 313-832-5700. 


Lumber baron's mansion still sparkles with old world glamour.

-Astoria Pastries: 541 Monroe St.; 313-963-9603. Try the house specialty 
-- 

frozen-lemonade smoothie.



DIVERSIONS

-Charles W. Wright Museum of African American History: 315 East Warren 
St.; 

313-494-5800; http://www.maah-detroit.org. An abundance of culture, 
history 

and pride.

-Detroit Institute of Arts: 5200 Woodward Ave.; 313-833-7900; 

http://www.dia.org. Under renovation, enough of its permanent collectionon 


is ondisplay to make it impressive.

-Comerica Park/Ford Field: 2100 Woodward Ave.; 

http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com. Replacing the fabled Tiger Stadium was no 

easy task, but Comerica Park, and its neighbour, Ford Field, do a pretty 

darn good job.

-MGM Grand Casino: 1300 John C. Lodge; 1-877-888-2121; 

http://detroit.mgmgrand.com. Go any day, any time for the full-on 

experience.

-Majestic Theater Center; 4120-4140 Woodward Ave.; 313-833-9700; 

http://www.majesticdetroit.com. Pivotal Detroit hangout.

-Campus Martius Park: 800 Woodward Ave.; http://www.campusmartiuspark.org. 


Detroit's new people-watching perch.

-Motor City Music Conference: (April 20-24); http://www.motorcitymusic.com
.

-MLB All-Star Game: (July 12) Comerica Park; http://mlb.mlb.com.

Made In Detroit: 400 Monroe St.; http://www.madeindetroit.com; 
313-963-6080 

Eminem wore some of MID's hometown gear in the movie 8 Mile.



MORE INFORMATION

-Detroit Tourism: 313-202-1800; http://www.visitdetroit.com.

-Super Bowl XL: (Feb. 5, 2006) Ford Field; http://www.sbxl.org.



website: www.gerald-matrix.com

event organiser/writer/dj: Kick Magazine - www.kickmagazine.ca

radio host: Equinox Radio on Electrique @ www.netmusique.com 








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