Difference between revisions of "Maps"
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== Downtown Areas == | == Downtown Areas == | ||
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* '''Int'l Riverfront:''' The Detroit International Riverfront is a tourist attraction and landmark of Detroit, Michigan extending from the Ambassador Bridge in the west to Belle Isle in the east, for a total of 5½ miles. The International Riverfront encompasses a cruise ship passenger terminal and dock, a marina, a multitude of parks, restaurants, retail shops, skyscrapers, and high rise residential areas along with Cobo Convention/Exhibition Center and Joe Louis Arena. Key public spaces in the International Riverfront, such as the RiverWalk, Dequindre Cut Greenway and Trail, William G. Milliken State Park and Harbor, and a cruise ship passenger terminal and dock at Hart Plaza complement the architecture of the area. | * '''Int'l Riverfront:''' The Detroit International Riverfront is a tourist attraction and landmark of Detroit, Michigan extending from the Ambassador Bridge in the west to Belle Isle in the east, for a total of 5½ miles. The International Riverfront encompasses a cruise ship passenger terminal and dock, a marina, a multitude of parks, restaurants, retail shops, skyscrapers, and high rise residential areas along with Cobo Convention/Exhibition Center and Joe Louis Arena. Key public spaces in the International Riverfront, such as the RiverWalk, Dequindre Cut Greenway and Trail, William G. Milliken State Park and Harbor, and a cruise ship passenger terminal and dock at Hart Plaza complement the architecture of the area. | ||
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== Southwest and West Side == | == Southwest and West Side == | ||
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* '''Mexicantown:''' With a 6.9 percent population rise to 96,000 from 1990 to 2000, the city's revitalized Mexicantown has improved the local economy. About half the residents are Hispanic, 25% are African American, 20% are non-Hispanic white and 5% are Arab American, according to the Southwest Detroit Business Association. Despite its name, the neighborhood's Hispanic community is not exclusively Mexican, and has a significant number of Puerto Ricans and other Hispanics as well. Though over half of the Hispanics in the area are of Mexican origin. It is known for Mexican cuisine at restaurants such as Mexican Village, Evie's Tamales, El Zocalo and Xochimilco. Restaurants, bakeries, and shops are located on Vernor Highway. Mexicantown has had a thriving economy in the 2000s (decade), as evidenced by new housing and increased business openings. Clark Park, named for John Pearson Clark who donated much of the land to the city, borders the neighborhood. Ste. Anne de Detroit Catholic Church is north of the Ambassador Bridge. The parts of Mexicantown nearest the freeway and closer in to the city remain populated, but areas farther out were lost to [[Measure 2]]. | * '''Mexicantown:''' With a 6.9 percent population rise to 96,000 from 1990 to 2000, the city's revitalized Mexicantown has improved the local economy. About half the residents are Hispanic, 25% are African American, 20% are non-Hispanic white and 5% are Arab American, according to the Southwest Detroit Business Association. Despite its name, the neighborhood's Hispanic community is not exclusively Mexican, and has a significant number of Puerto Ricans and other Hispanics as well. Though over half of the Hispanics in the area are of Mexican origin. It is known for Mexican cuisine at restaurants such as Mexican Village, Evie's Tamales, El Zocalo and Xochimilco. Restaurants, bakeries, and shops are located on Vernor Highway. Mexicantown has had a thriving economy in the 2000s (decade), as evidenced by new housing and increased business openings. Clark Park, named for John Pearson Clark who donated much of the land to the city, borders the neighborhood. Ste. Anne de Detroit Catholic Church is north of the Ambassador Bridge. The parts of Mexicantown nearest the freeway and closer in to the city remain populated, but areas farther out were lost to [[Measure 2]]. | ||
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== East Side == | == East Side == | ||
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== Midtown and Uptown == | == Midtown and Uptown == | ||
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== North == | == North == | ||
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* '''Palmer Park and the University District:'' The land encompassing Palmer Park and its historic districts was once the estate of Thomas Palmer, a wealthy Detroit resident and U.S. Senator. The neighborhood was platted in the mid-1910s. It contains many large homes and mansions constructed primarily between 1917 and 1929 and is known for its elm-lined streets, large brick homes, and widely varying architecture. The Palmer Park Apartment Building Historic District, on the other hand, is a small area of beautiful apartment buildings constructed in the 1920s and 1930s; at one time this area was Detroit's primary LGBTQ community hotspot, but an increase in crime encouraged a migration (by those who could afford to migrate) to outer suburb cities like Ferndale and Royal Oak. The better-known subdivisions within Palmer Park, other than the two historic districts, are Grixdale Farms, Palmer Woods and Sherwood Forest. The University District west of Palmer Park is named for the University of Detroit-Mercy; there are wealthy homeowners here, but also a wide assortment of businesses and apartment buildings for the university community. | * '''Palmer Park and the University District:'' The land encompassing Palmer Park and its historic districts was once the estate of Thomas Palmer, a wealthy Detroit resident and U.S. Senator. The neighborhood was platted in the mid-1910s. It contains many large homes and mansions constructed primarily between 1917 and 1929 and is known for its elm-lined streets, large brick homes, and widely varying architecture. The Palmer Park Apartment Building Historic District, on the other hand, is a small area of beautiful apartment buildings constructed in the 1920s and 1930s; at one time this area was Detroit's primary LGBTQ community hotspot, but an increase in crime encouraged a migration (by those who could afford to migrate) to outer suburb cities like Ferndale and Royal Oak. The better-known subdivisions within Palmer Park, other than the two historic districts, are Grixdale Farms, Palmer Woods and Sherwood Forest. The University District west of Palmer Park is named for the University of Detroit-Mercy; there are wealthy homeowners here, but also a wide assortment of businesses and apartment buildings for the university community. |
Revision as of 01:48, 6 September 2017
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