Detroit Free Press

‘CITIZENS DESERVE A BEAUTIFUL PLACE TO LIVE’

Lot sale could force a treasure to be uprooted in Highland Park

- Nushrat Rahman

A community garden on Avalon Street in Highland Park sits next to a boarded-up house. Partially tucked under a canopy of trees, the garden supplies fresh produce for neighbors nearby and regulars from Detroit to Madison Heights.

Large planters hold cherry tomatoes, strawberri­es, bell peppers, string beans, cabbage and kale. During the summer, the space is a classroom where children learn how to start a garden, and identify and grow plants.

The garden, run by the nonprofit Avalon Village, has been around since the spring of 2022. Before that, the lot was overgrown with bushes and weeds, said Sandra Sanders, an Avalon Village volunteer who started the garden and maintains it today.

“It’s for everybody,” Sanders said. “It started out for the community.”

Now, that garden — a key piece of Avalon Village’s mission to turn “blight to beauty” in Highland Park — is at risk, and the center of a land dispute. The city of Highland Park owns the lot. A property developer has wanted to purchase it since 2018. Meanwhile, Avalon Village has already cultivated a community space there.

Premier Michigan Properties (PMP) 51 Avalon, a limited liability company that purchases homes to renovate them, wants to buy the lot where the garden grows. Rick Lopez, owner of Premier Michigan Properties, said his company has sought to purchase the lot from the city. The land sits next to a home PMP 51 Avalon bought from Wayne County’s tax foreclosur­e auction in 2017.

“The backyard is mostly consumed by a very large garage so the adjacent lot would provide

much needed space for families to spend time outdoors,” Lopez said in an email Friday.

Though it’s not Avalon Village’s land, the nonprofit grew a community garden there because she didn’t want the lot to become blighted, said Shamayim “Mama Shu” Harris, founder and CEO of Avalon Village.

“I believe that our citizens and Highland Parkers deserve a beautiful place to live. I believe that we deserve beautiful surroundin­gs. I believe that we deserve manicured grass, flowers,” Harris said. Avalon Village applied to purchase the lot about a month ago, she said.

Harris and several others spoke out last month during a Highland Park City Council meeting saying the lot should go to Avalon Village because of Harris’ investment in Highland Park and efforts keeping up the lot, according to audio of the meeting recorded by Detroit Documenter­s. They argued that PMP 51 Avalon, LLC hasn’t kept up the adjacent

home it owns.

The windows of the home, owned by PMP 51 Avalon, LLC, are boarded-up, parts of the porch stairs are missing and paint on the porch railing is chipped. Avalon Village, Harris said, has mowed that parcel’s front lawn.

Lopez said his company has made improvemen­ts to the house.

“Upon purchasing the property, new roofs were installed on the home and garage to protect the structures while we waited for approval from the city to purchase the adjacent lot,” Lopez said.

PMP 51 Avalon, LLC is a business registered in Michigan but the mailing address is in La Jolla, California, according to state business records.

“Upon purchase of a home, we immediatel­y secure the property, meeting the city’s requiremen­ts for vacant homes. We do not have any infraction­s on any of our homes,” Lopez said.

One council member at the August meeting said the lot sale is complicate­d because it’s between a major developer in Highland Park, who is requesting land when an existing property they own sits vacant, and a longtime community activist, who is occupying a parcel that belongs to the city.

If the lot is sold to the company, Avalon Village would have to uproot the garden and find another spot for it, Harris said. During that transition, Avalon Village would not be able to offer the community fresh produce and the move could interrupt its outdoor classroom. City council must decide whether to sell the lot to PMP. A resolution to do so is on the agenda for Tuesday’s council meeting.

“When we are approved for purchase of the lot, we would request Avalon Village to relocate equipment to any of the Village’s various vacant/adjacent lots on the same street to allow for the continuanc­e of the community garden,” Lopez said. “Once the lot is secured, we can begin planned renovation­s. Our goal is to enhance Avalon Street with a beautifull­y restored 115year-old home and welcome two families to the community.”

On Thursday, two children, ages 5 and 6, strolled around the garden with paper bags of kale and bell peppers.

“The garden is our favorite part about Avalon Village,” said Terian Morrow, 41, of Detroit, who was there with the girls. Before going to the grocery store, she checks out the garden. She visits four times a week.

It would be a great injustice, Morrow said, if people no longer had access to the garden.

“If there’s a vacant lot, if there’s a blight, we are responsibl­e for taking care of our neighborho­ods,” Morrow said.

Highland Park is a municipali­ty located within Detroit’s city limits with a population of more than 8,600. The city has gone through tumultuous times, as properties emptied and street lights dimmed. Through Avalon Village, Harris is on a mission to transform vacant and abandoned lots and structures in Highland Park into a sustainabl­e village on Avalon Street, between Woodward and Second avenues. Avalon Village also includes a Homework House for students, a marketplac­e for women entreprene­urs and a basketball court.

Avalon Village came about after the death of her 2-year old son, Jakobi RA Harris, in a hit and run. Years later, two of her other sons, Chinyelu Humphrey and Pili Humphrey, died as well. Portions of the village are dedicated to her children.

Harris, who said her nonprofit has limited funding and capacity, said she tried to purchase the property that PMP currently owns to create a community space but was outbid. In the meantime, she said she has watched that property fall apart.

Lopez said he doesn’t understand why the sale of the lot next to the property his company owns has taken so long. PMP, he said, has followed up with the city each year since it submitted the applicatio­n.

“With a new roof, security systems and windows boardedup, the home is secure and the community is safe while we wait to hear back. Quite frankly, we are surprised by the length of time it has taken to hear back from the city as we meet all of the requiremen­ts to purchase the adjacent lot,” Lopez said.

City council agendas list the lot that PMP wants to purchase as a “vacant residentia­l adjacent lot.” According to a city ordinance that details the rules for purchasing vacant lots, those who want to purchase a “vacant residentia­l side lot” must own the adjoining home and maintain the lot. Neighborin­g vacant lot owners can also submit an applicatio­n and split the cost and the lot.

 ?? PHOTOS BY KIMBERLY P. MITCHELL/DFP ?? Volunteer Sandra “Garden Diva” Sanders, 66, of Detroit, center, hands a bell pepper to Theora, 5, while picking vegetables from the community garden at Avalon Village in Highland Park. Grace Juarez, 71, of Madison Heights, left, and Andaiye, 6, of Detroit, right, look on.
PHOTOS BY KIMBERLY P. MITCHELL/DFP Volunteer Sandra “Garden Diva” Sanders, 66, of Detroit, center, hands a bell pepper to Theora, 5, while picking vegetables from the community garden at Avalon Village in Highland Park. Grace Juarez, 71, of Madison Heights, left, and Andaiye, 6, of Detroit, right, look on.
 ?? ?? Sanders picks green beans she grew in the community garden at Avalon Village in Highland Park on Thursday. The community garden sits in an empty lot and is at risk.
Sanders picks green beans she grew in the community garden at Avalon Village in Highland Park on Thursday. The community garden sits in an empty lot and is at risk.
 ?? PHOTOS BY KIMBERLY P. MITCHELL/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Sandra “Garden Diva” Sanders, 66, of Detroit, is working in the community garden she grew at Avalon Village in Highland Park on Thursday. The garden sits in an empty lot and is at risk. Premier Michigan Properties LLC with a mailing address of La Jolla, Calif., owns the vacant home next to the garden and wants to buy the lot. So does Avalon Village. Now, neighbors are fiercely pushing back against the company.
PHOTOS BY KIMBERLY P. MITCHELL/DETROIT FREE PRESS Sandra “Garden Diva” Sanders, 66, of Detroit, is working in the community garden she grew at Avalon Village in Highland Park on Thursday. The garden sits in an empty lot and is at risk. Premier Michigan Properties LLC with a mailing address of La Jolla, Calif., owns the vacant home next to the garden and wants to buy the lot. So does Avalon Village. Now, neighbors are fiercely pushing back against the company.
 ?? ?? Shamayim “Mama Shu” Harris works from her porch, while a cutout of her deceased son Chinyelu “Invincible” Humphrey watches over her at Avalon
Village in Highland Park on Thursday.
Shamayim “Mama Shu” Harris works from her porch, while a cutout of her deceased son Chinyelu “Invincible” Humphrey watches over her at Avalon Village in Highland Park on Thursday.

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