Detroit Free Press

Popular doughnut spot reopens with drive-thru, new updates

- Amelia Benavides-Colón

A community staple in southwest Detroit, Donut Villa, reopened recently with a fresh face after working out of a temporary location for the last year.

Located along West Vernor Highway since 1975, the donut and coffee shop evolved from a meeting place for day laborers on their commute into downtown’s bustling factories into the unofficial, official rendezvous for residents of Detroit’s Mexicantow­n.

Gabriel Gutierrez purchased the building in 2018 from its original owners and immediatel­y got to work applying for grants to renovate the 1,500-square-foot pastry shop.

After having the idea to bust open the cemented-over drive-thru window from the building’s former life, Gutierrez learned he had to petition the Detroit Board of Zoning Appeals because of Vernor Avenue’s status as a historical mainstay.

The building’s facade improvemen­ts were redone thanks to a $10,000 Southwest Detroit Business Associatio­n grant focused on helping local businesses fight city fines.

“After receiving the grant, I was able to then dedicate some resources to open up this roof,” Gutierrez told Local 4.

The shop’s S-shaped Formica countertop­s were given a fresh coat of bright orange paint and the building’s ceiling raised opening up the space. Donut Villa is now equipped with bathrooms and a fully operationa­l drive-thru window.

Mother-daughter duo Mercedes and Liliana Santos live in the community around Donut Villa, and said the shop feels bigger and like more of a community

“Especially because of (the) COVID-19 (pandemic) there’s not a lot of places for the people to go and feel comfortabl­e,” said Santos. “It’s so beautiful in here now and we really missed having our spot to go together after school and church.”

Gutierrez comes from a family of entreprene­urs who’ve made a lasting imprint on southwest Detroit, his parents Lydia and Richard Gutierrez founded Hacienda Mexican Foods, at 6016 West Vernor, in the early 1990s and his grandparen­ts establishe­d La Michoacana Tortilla

Factory, at 3428 Bagley St., in 1940.

When the COVID-19 pandemic restrictio­ns made it difficult for Donut Villa to service customers in 2022, Gutierrez temporaril­y moved his operation down the block to his parent’s kitchen.

What started as a simple renovation plan in 2020, turned into supply chain delays, zoning appeals, and community petitions.

SDBA’s program sponsors pulled out in March 2023 and SDBA is looking for new sponsors.

“We’ve been able to do about $3.4 million in renovation­s in southwest Detroit and support these businesses for these last 17 years, but we definitely can’t stop,” CEO of SDBA Laura Chavez told Local 4. “We need sustainabl­e funding to continue to do this.”

 ?? RYAN GARZA/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Donut Villa owner Gabriel Gutierrez hugs Debra Ryder, left, of Detroit and her husband, Kevin, right, while talking with the couple after they stopped in to purchase paczki on Feb. 13 at the shop that is in southwest Detroit and recently reopened following renovation­s.
RYAN GARZA/DETROIT FREE PRESS Donut Villa owner Gabriel Gutierrez hugs Debra Ryder, left, of Detroit and her husband, Kevin, right, while talking with the couple after they stopped in to purchase paczki on Feb. 13 at the shop that is in southwest Detroit and recently reopened following renovation­s.

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