Toronto Star

COMEBACK CITY

New Detroit doesn’t need pity. It has become arts-driven and family-friendly with an energy that’s hard to ignore

- JENNIFER BAIN TRAVEL EDITOR

DETROIT, MICH.— You will feel the energy as soon as you get off the plane at Detroit Metropolit­an Airport’s McNamara Terminal and make your way through an undergroun­d tunnel exploding with a colour-changing light and sound show.

The Light Tunnel uses LED lighting to illuminate glass panels with sandblaste­d Michigan artwork in a dazzling, multi-sensory show that’s synchroniz­ed to an original score by an Ohio outfit.

“Welcome to Motor City,” the pilot said when we hit the tarmac. “Welcome to Art City,” is what he should have said. Something remarkable is happening here. The city is exploding with art and food and activity. Creative types are coming from all over to be part of the transforma­tion. Stop feeling sorry for Detroit. Stop being scared of Detroit. The story here is no longer automobile industry collapse, decline, decay and blight.

It’s about a glorious city that birthed the Model T and Motown, that’s coming back better, stronger, artier.

Let Kim Rusinow of Show Me Detroit Toursgive you a guided bus tour.

“We’re a blank canvas at this point — we have so many opportunit­ies to be creative,” she enthuses. “Detroit’s coming back and you’re going to want to come back again and again and again.”

There’s Midtown with the “eds, meds and arts.” That’s short for universiti­es, medical centres and Sugar Hill Arts District anchored by the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Museum of Contempora­ry Art Detroit.

Downtown fills up with passionate sports fans when the Detroit Tigers are playing Comerica Park or the Lions are at Ford Field.

Next year, Little Caesars Arena will give the Red Wings a dynamic home between downtown and Midtown, and will anchor a new sports and entertainm­ent district called the District Detroit.

Also downtown is Greektown, with its three casinos, but I’ll be taking the kids on the Detroit People Mover, with art in all 13 stations.

It’s just 75 cents and you can stay on the single-track train loop as long as you want.

Culturally cool Corktown is fully hipster and home to the Detroit Institute of Bagels, Batch Brewing (the city’s first nano brewery), music destinatio­ns, such as the UFO Factory and Hostel Detroit, with its free walking tours.

Nearby, along Grand River Avenue, it’s all about the street art and graffiti murals.

Rebel Nell, Rusinow explains, employs disadvanta­ged women in order to repurpose these very graffiti paint chips into jewelry.

“Adaptive reuse” is a term everyone uses here.

The Globe Building, part of an 1860s-era riverfront complex that sat vacant for decades, is now the incredible Outdoor Adventure Center, created by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

Inside the centre (the name is a tad misleading), kids experience the great outdoors indoors with handson activities, exhibits and simulators. They touch a “waterfall,” climb an “oak tree,” walk across a suspension bridge, “fish” from a boat and take a simulated trail ride on a real snowmobile.

Speaking of transporta­tion, this city is moving beyond cars.

Marc Pasco from the Detroit Riverfront Conservanc­y walks us along the Dequindre Cut, a wide, paved pedestrian/bike path that links the riverfront with Eastern Market.

The Cut is photo central for graffiti, murals and a piece that’s part of the Detroit Institute of Art’s Inside/Out program that puts famous reproducti­ons out for everyone to enjoy.

Call boxes and security cameras dot the path, just as Quicken Loans/ Rock Ventures honcho Dan Gilbert’s corporate security force has more than 500 cameras downtown. It’s Big Brother to some, but a reassuring presence for others.

To see the city on two wheels, go to Wheelhouse Detroit on the waterfront for a guided tour or bike rental. Pick an iconic black Detroit Bike.

Motor City Brew Tours is an option for the 21-and-up crowd wanting bus, bike or walking tours to celebrate Michigan craft beer at spots such as Traffic Jam & Snug (open since 1965, a brew pub since 1992) and Atwater Block Brewery’s downtown tap house.

“You learn about history and get rewarded with beer,” founder and beer author Stephen Johnson likes to quip.

Hungry? Start with the famous Coney Island hotdogs.

Next, Punch Bowl Social will keep you fed, watered and amused with old-school entertainm­ent such as bowling, ping pong, shuffleboa­rd and karaoke. In Eastern Market, Dave Mancini is well loved for Supino Pizzeria and now La Rondinella.

There’s a reason why Food Network Magazine put HopCat’s beerbatter­ed Crack Fries sprinkled with cracked black pepper and sided by warm cheese dipping sauce on its Top 10 list. Resistance is futile. Besides, the Midtown brew pub has 130 all-Michigan craft beer taps.

Not far from HopCat at the rustic chic Selden Standard, executive chef/partner Andy Hollyday’s New American shared plates and craft cocktails are works of art.

Art of some form infuses virtually every Detroit moment.

It’s at Pewabic, a non-profit ceramic design studio that had a hand in the Detroit People Mover tile murals. Take a free, self-guided tour, meet the artisans and check out both hand-operated machinery and digital kilns.

Art is all over Eastern Market, “a playground for grown-ups” with multiple markets, food, vintage clothing and boutiques. The Red Bull House of Art is here, too, with exhibition­s, lectures and a national residency program for young artists.

“I always had this feeling of Detroit having a ghost of a prosperous past, and when I got here it was still lingering,” admits Ian Kuali’i, a Hawaiirais­ed artist-in-residence from Berkeley, Calif.

“Now I’m extremely hopeful for Detroit. As a complete outsider coming in, it’s pretty incredible.”

At the Russell Industrial Center, people such as street fashion designer Dana Keaton and studio glass artist Bill Poceta are finding affordable work space in a converted factory.

“We have a creative element and a musical element going on here that’s really phenomenal,” Poceta says.

“We’re pretty pumped about the city.”

Poceta is old enough to have seen Detroit both falter and rebound. Same goes for Robert Sestok, who has lived in the once-notorious Cass Corridor (now rebranding as Midtown) for 40 years.

He bought four cheap lots for $18,000 (U.S.) and unveiled City Sculpture Park last year, full of his hulking welded steel sculptures. He opens the gates daily and will come talk art if you email him.

“It’s kind of a fun experience to have this and share this with other people,” Sestok says.

Downtown, in what was once the garment district, you can’t miss the trifecta of the Library Street Collective, the Belt and the Z garage.

Library Street is a cutting-edge modern/contempora­ry fine-art gallery. With Dan Gilbert-owned Bedrock Real Estate Services, it activated the public alley out its back door into an art experience full of murals and art installati­ons called the Belt.

Surroundin­g most of the Belt is the Z, a 10-storey “park in the art” garage with a 3D-style facade and interior murals by 27 artists. Gilbert’s firm built this zigzagging garage and you can watch a short doc about it in the garage lobby after taking in the view from the roof.

“Art,” says Red Bull House of Art director/curator Matthew Eaton, “is the greatest unacknowle­dged asset that we have.”

By “we” he means the world, not just Detroit.

The city still uses the nickname Motor City, but “Detroit is now is becoming more and more known for its art,” declares Margaret Grace, manager of educationa­l programmin­g for the Heidelberg Project. “It’s an art city.”

“I always had this feeling of Detroit having a ghost of a prosperous past, and when I got here it was still lingering.” IAN KUALI’I ARTIST

The Heidelberg Project draws upwards of 300,000 visitors a year to one of America’s poorest zip codes for “open air art.”

Tyree Guyton has been taking a stand against decay, crime and apathy for 30 years and transformi­ng the vacant lots and abandoned homes of his childhood neighbourh­ood into a “Ghetto Guggenheim” with discarded objects from everyday life.

Afew neighbours, such as 60-something Otila Bell, have joined in. You can pay $1 to literally sign her “YellowHous­e” and help pay hot-water bills, install new railings and otherwise keep the century-old home standing. You will hopefully run into the eccentric Guyton himself, who will now take his project apart “in a methodical way” and create something else to keep the world coming back to Detroit.

“It’s going to take every single one of us to change this city,” Guyton says. Jennifer Bain was hosted by Travel Michigan, which didn’t review or approve this story.

 ?? VITO PAOMISANO/DETROIT METRO CVB ?? The story in Detroit, Mich., is no longer automobile-industry collapse, decline, decay and blight. A vibrant revival of the city that birthed the Model T is being driven by artsy flair and innovation.
VITO PAOMISANO/DETROIT METRO CVB The story in Detroit, Mich., is no longer automobile-industry collapse, decline, decay and blight. A vibrant revival of the city that birthed the Model T is being driven by artsy flair and innovation.
 ?? JENNIFER BAIN/TORONTO STAR ?? JJ Curis, left, co-owns Library Street Collective. She sits with artist Matt Eaton.
JENNIFER BAIN/TORONTO STAR JJ Curis, left, co-owns Library Street Collective. She sits with artist Matt Eaton.
 ?? DETROIT RIVERFRONT CONSERVANC­Y ?? The Dequindre Cut, an art-filled path, links the waterfront to the Eastern Market.
DETROIT RIVERFRONT CONSERVANC­Y The Dequindre Cut, an art-filled path, links the waterfront to the Eastern Market.
 ?? SAL RODRIGUEZ ?? The Z garage is a 10-storey, artistic public parking garage downtown that is plastered with murals by 27 artists.
SAL RODRIGUEZ The Z garage is a 10-storey, artistic public parking garage downtown that is plastered with murals by 27 artists.
 ?? BILL BOWEN ?? Exploring Eastern Market is on everybody’s Detroit to do list.
BILL BOWEN Exploring Eastern Market is on everybody’s Detroit to do list.

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