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Post No. 1

Posted By: Aaron Alston, 7/26/2007
A House Is Not A Home 

As I move through various social and professional circles in Metro Detroit I hear people talking about Detroit's need for "this" and lack of "that." There’s the ubiquitous bearer of bad news with his rally cry “the sky is falling” and the constant naysayer who revels in the misery of others. However, in small pockets about town I also hear a whisper --which I hope will soon be a shout-- of the many unique and positive things that exist and are happening within our city. The voices that make up this whisper are people who, I believe, view Detroit as a house in which it is their role to make a home.

It can be argued that a house is not a home without the care and attention of inhabitants who fill it with all the things they need to make it their own. This too applies to Detroit. Making Detroit a home requires that its inhabitants, both suburban and urban, adopt a different perspective on who takes responsibility for our city's need for "this" and the lack of "that."

There are a growing number of individuals who have embraced this perspective and are committed to play a role, be it small or large, in the betterment of our house. This can be found in individual home owners who form block clubs, in developers like David Bing and Bernard Glieberman, in business owners like Peter Karmanos and, hopefully, Dan Gilbert who make it their responsibility to create the kind of city they want for themselves and others. 

In mid 2004 I too felt the calling to play my own role in making Detroit my home --both figuratively and literally. My business partner and I were having a phone conversation about community wealth building and I just so happened to mention to him a wild idea of mine: to search for an abandon city-owned building of no more than 50,000 square feet that we could buy for one dollar and restore to its original grandeur. To my surprise he said, "I have a 50,000 square foot building that I did a walk through of in early March. However, the bid package is due on this property in two weeks." I jumped right on it and assured him that I would be able to put something together before the deadline.

I remember after hanging up saying to myself, “what did I commit myself to?” I had no prior experience as a developer and I wasn’t sure I could meet the deadline.  
 
Well, we met the deadline and after the city review was complete, our proposal tied for first place among nine other bids. I caught wind that the other team was made up of seven different guys in their 30s who lived in and around the central business district and only wanted to own their own unit in this twelve story building to live in. Someone had the foresight to ask the two remaining teams to sit down to see if we could work out an agreement to merge. Since this project was the first of what I hoped to be many for my partner and me, and we were completely speculating on the development, it made sense for us to work out some form of agreement. We formed a multi-cultural group of beginner developers, all within their 30s, to purchase the Vinton building for $500,000 from the city and develop it into luxury loftominiums with first floor retail and second floor commercial space. 

I guess the excitement of being a part of this development and interacting with the great group guys on its team energized me so much, I decided to move both Candor Marketing Group (based in Troy) and my Birmingham residence to the Vinton Building as one small step towards making this wonderful house (Detroit) into a home. 

Comments:
Thursday, July 26, 2007 10:19 AM by Robert
Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of not seen, you had faith in a possibility and it became a reality -- that is what it will take to restore that which many think was lost. It was not lost, just grossly ignored until now. Keep the faith and continue to do great things for Detroit!
Thursday, July 26, 2007 10:37 AM by Isaac D. Kremer
What a great post! For a while now I've wondered what, exactly, will go into the VB. It's a beautiful 1902 building by one of our most famous architects - Albert Kahn. Originally occupied by a prominent construction firm in the early 20th century - how appropriate that a cutting edge 21st century marketing firm and other leaders select this for their home in an exciting adaptive reuse/preservation project. The physical updating of the building itself in a way that is sensitive to its heritage is like what is needed all throughout Detroit and increasingly in outlying suburban areas which previously were thought not to have a unique heritage of their own (but they do of course).

As an aside, Vinton & Co. was responsible for the building that DuMouchelle Art Gallieries is in on Jefferson (409) and another at 673 Franklin - to name a few. There are likely many, many other buildings by the firm all throughout Detroit, though better documentation on their work as the work of other firms is needed.

So, again, congratulations. You're living the often quoted truism from Ghandi - be the change which you wish to see in the world.

Isaac D. Kremer
www.PreserveDetroit.com
Thursday, July 26, 2007 10:48 AM by patricia austin
Detroit is a great place to live if living is what you want to do. I have lived here for 54 years.Born, went to school, married and worked in Detroit.Detroit has it's bad points just as all cities.There are also 100 times more good points Schools, resturants,movies, plays, and a great downtown. STOP trashing and build up your town.I see DETROIT as a glass that's not only half full,but cold and good.
Thursday, July 26, 2007 11:36 AM by Trish Hubbell
Detroit is indeed a fine place to live, work, and play. It is an interesting, gritty, hard-working town full of determined folks committed to making things work. Detroit is not an island. In the spirit of collaboration and unity, it is more important than ever before to bridge communities. The city of Detroit needs its suburbs, and the suburbs need the city. We can collectively move our region forward if we truly value the talent, resources, and unique gifts that all people and parties bring to the table. We all need to be part of the solution! Reach out, invest, commit, participate, and most of all.....believe.
Thursday, July 26, 2007 11:51 AM by Barbara Eskridge
The glass is only half full when we want downtown to look like Chicago, but you can't sit on your front porch and children being shot in their own homes and on the street. We roll down car windows and thro out trash so the will not get dirty. Young people running the street until 1 and 2 in the morning because they don't have any where to go!!! Guns everwhere!
The city when you leave downtown is half empty, we can't all live downtown.
Thursday, July 26, 2007 12:12 PM by Pam Turner
I see great potential in Detroit. I see people moving elsewhere talking bad about the city. But I ask those people this "What have you done to better the city?" It seems people like to think Detroit is somebody elses problem. But I see Detroit as full of POTENTIAL. I don't only talk the talk I put things in motion. I went to school and college in Detroit, Bought my first home in Detroit, I work in Detroit, Met my husband in Detroit, Go to church here and shop here. I have passion when I speak of Detroit. People need to learn to think and be positive about Detroit or just keep there mouths closed. Its simple be part of the solution or continue being part of the problem.
Thursday, July 26, 2007 1:22 PM by Dorethia Conner
You are right, there are many exciting things going on in Detroit. There will always be some negative somewhere, but once you focus on the positive and decide join the fight as you and many others have, the glass will overflow. I am active in the community and see so many quality programs, ventures in Detroit that it stimulates a pride that cannot be trampled by the evening news. Congrats to you and your partners. Kudos to everyone - whether it is residents, businesses, organizations, block clubs, or suburbanites - who see the gem that Detroit is and are willing to polish it up!
Thursday, July 26, 2007 9:13 PM by Carol Farver
I love what you're doing. I am a board member of the Metro Detroit Quality of Life Improvement Association. Feel free to check us out at www.mdqlia.org. Although we are still in a start up phase, we are working to help pull the city up by it's bootstraps and be a community where we don't say "it takes a village to raise a child", but exhibit how a village can raise a child through community and regional cohesiveness. Perhaps we can work together.
Friday, July 27, 2007 9:38 AM by Kwasi Akwamu
Welcome home!

It is the most enterprising among us who will revitalize Detroit. Yet, accompanying all our efforts, we also assume responsibility for inspiring those who are less enterprising to have confidence in Detroit's future. More, we must inspire them to enthusiastically play their small but invaluable part in transforming potential into actuality!

Great blog....keep 'em coming!
Friday, July 27, 2007 3:24 PM by Tiffany Jackson
Aaron I appreciate your comments and commitment to Detroit. It's refreshing to see a young, successful, African-American male taking stock in our beloved city. I wish you the best of luck!
Friday, July 27, 2007 4:44 PM by Ray P. Shephard
To add to your perspectives which are some very good analogies of the relationship between the city of Detroit and it’s neighboring suburban partners who enhances Michigan’s architecture drawing of the families; families who continue to invest their deposits of family wealth in the dreams and ideas of Detroit.

It is not an accidental occurrence of related minds crying in the wilderness of what has fallen from the seams of a once vibrant city that has drawn you to a water well that almost went dry. It is a vision of the younger brother in the home that refuse to allow the eldest of the youngest to prevail over a weakened family, who has suffered long enough of the eels of the economy. You bring to our city forgiveness, which units the family back together. This helps the cause to build on possibilities, on what Detroit can do as a family in the home, which is to do a number of things: share, eat together, work together, exchange together, build wealth together, pray together, believe together, and the many other creative thinking a father and mother will bring in the minds of their children.

The scene that is presented so eloquently through your post in my opinion, is what has happen already in a city that is recovering slowly for the experience of a divorce by the eldest of the family. Yet, people like you and the group of developers, teaming up to find a place that is abandoned in the home of Detroit and assure the many spectators, that building upon the vision of what is decade is a big role play; and is quite expected and welcomed, because the views presented by the Metro Detroiters around the world is more than just a whisper but indeed a shout to those who are connected to the professional circle like yourself, who have the ability to cause wealth to flourish in our jurisdiction.

My thought, I’m just so glad to hear that my quite spoken prayer, joined with other Detroiters and suburbanites saw fit to reach one of the missing pieces of our dream, which is to fulfill the cities personal ambitions, unit history with the future, and the desires of such people, as the investors
Thursday, August 02, 2007 10:38 AM by Jason A. Cole
Aaron, I too suffer from why we can't be better. I travel extensively to Atlanta and DC and see how they get it right. The city governments don't have two municipalities operating inside of them (Highland Park/Hamtramck) and they have responsible governments ie(council people by district). What's good for the State and Fed should be good for the city (accountability).

Detroit has jewels that we are now finally realizing and accentuating the positive. But if we don't get the transportation and convention situations correct we will continue to languish. And lets not talk about the public education system, I am so dismayed by the foolishness that is running rampant over there it makes me cry.

I am trying to mentor DPS students, I have moderated panels on the "Good, Bad and Ugly" of real estate investment and development in Detroit, I am trying to start three new chapters of national organizations. I want my city to be better, but I am just one man not in power or control. I ask everyone to step up and do something...anything.

Jason A. Cole
jason.a.cole@att.net
Saturday, August 04, 2007 10:45 AM by Nicole
What if all of us, who have looked at an empty dilapidated beautiful building in Detroit and had a great idea of what to do with it, but no previous development experience were as brave as Aaron was and just decided to go for it?
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