Detroit Photographer Aims to Capture Every Mural in the Motor City | NBC Left Field
Viranel Clerard is the founder of the Detroit Mural Project, which is dedicated to photographing all the street art in the city of Detroit. As the city undergoes changes, Clerard believes it is important to archive wall murals that are several decades old, as well as the work of new artists shaping the city. He sees his work documenting art murals as one more avenue of community building and making Detroit a stronger place.
You can see Viranel Clerard's photography here:
SUBSCRIBE:
FOLLOW NBC LEFT FIELD:
Facebook:
Instagram:
Twitter:
CALL THE FIELD PHONE: ☎️ (315) LF-FIELD
VISIT OUR SITE:
Video journalists
Haimy Assefa
Sutton Raphael
Photos
Viranel Clerard
__
ABOUT NBC LEFT FIELD:
NBC Left Field is a new internationally-minded video troupe that makes short, creative documentaries and features specially designed for social media and set-top boxes. Our small team of cinematographers, journalists, animators and social media gurus aims to unearth stories and breathe creative life into current headlines. While pushing boundaries at home and abroad, NBC Left Field will also be serving as an experimental hub for NBC News style, treatment and audience engagement.
Places to see in ( Detroit - USA )
Places to see in ( Detroit - USA )
Detroit is the largest city in the midwestern state of Michigan. Near Downtown, the neoclassical Detroit Institute of Arts is famed for the Detroit Industry Murals painted by Diego Rivera, and inspired by the city’s ties to the auto industry, giving it the nickname Motor City. Detroit is also the birthplace of Motown Records, whose chart-topping history is on display at their original headquarters, Hitsville U.S.A.
Detroit is the largest city in the US state of Michigan, known for its Motown sound, rock music, world class museums, automobile culture, sports teams, arts, and theatres. After decades of decline and population loss, Detroit has seen many of its historic buildings renovated, and its downtown core bustling with new developments and attractions. Detroit offers many things to see and do, an exciting travel destination filled with technological advance and historic charm.
Districts of Detroit Michigan :
Downtown
Detroit's central business district, contains most of the prominent skyscrapers in Detroit, the nation's second largest theatre district, several parks, three casinos, and three major league sporting venues.
Midtown-New Center
Detroit's cultural center, home to several world class museums, art galleries, and Wayne State University.
East Side
Detroit's eastside, a collection of former blue collar neighborhoods that have suffered from extensive urban decay, has many hidden gems worth checking out in a car, including Belle Isle and The Heidelberg Project.
Southwest Side
Detroit's southwestside, an industrial region home to trendy and ethnically diverse Corktown and Mexicantown neighborhoods.
West Side
Detroit's westside, a large residential area that has a mix of numerous historic neighborhoods with mansions and blue collar neighborhoods built in the early 20th century.
Hamtramck-Highland Park
While never annexed with the city of Detroit, the cities of Hamtramck and Highland Park are entirely landlocked by Detroit and function as neighborhoods of the city. Hamtramck has a large Polish population and is known for its numerous bars and restaurants.
Detroit is known as the world's Automobile Capital and Motown (for Motor Town), the city where Henry Ford pioneered the automotive assembly line, with the world's first mass produced car, the Model T. During World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt called Detroit the Arsenal of Democracy. Today, the region serves as the global center for the automotive world. Headquartered in metro Detroit, General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler all have major corporate, manufacturing, engineering, design, and research facilities in the area. Hyundai, Toyota, Nissan, among others, have a presence in the region.
A lot to see in Detroit Michigan such as :
The Henry Ford
Belle Isle Park
Renaissance Center
Detroit Institute of Arts
Comerica Park
Detroit Zoo
Eastern Market, Detroit
Greektown, Detroit
Corktown, Detroit
Ambassador Bridge
Motown Museum
Hart Plaza
The Guardian Building
Campus Martius Park
Fox Theatre
MotorCity Casino Hotel
The Heidelberg Project
Joe Louis Arena
Belle Isle Aquarium
MGM Grand Detroit
Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory
Detroit Historical Society
Detroit Riverfront Conservancy
Fair Lane, Home of Clara and Henry Ford
Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History
Greektown Casino
Michigan Science Center
Michigan Central Train Depot
William G. Milliken State Park and Harbor
Pewabic Pottery
Grand Circus Park
Dossin Great Lakes Museum
RiverWalk
Ford Piquette Avenue Plant
New Center
Edsel & Eleanor Ford House
Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit
Belle Isle Nature Center
Palmer Park
Detroit Riverwalk
Indian Village
Dequindre Cut
Islamic Center of America
Rouge Park
Windsor Sculpture Park
The Spirit of Detroit
Zug Island
Brush Park
Detroit Historical Museum
Historic Fort Wayne
( Detroit - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Detroit . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Detroit - USA
Join us for more :
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
Driving in Detroit, mostly Downtown Area.
Last 3 min of the video: some nice close-ups of the GM Building, Entrance into the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel (Canada-bound) AND a US Border Patrol Parking Lot, IMHO a total waste of money to keep so many vehicles in this very area instead of using them exactly where they are REALLY needed, The MEXICAN Border, in 20+ years I've never heard of any lunatic trying to get into Detroit, USA illegally, swimming of course.
Hopefully this video is gonna put a little smile on the brave and hardworking ppl of Detroit in these very hard times for them:
Bad, VERY bad politics of a particular political spectrum, the major cause for how Detroit looks like and experiencing nowadays.
Music by Detroit's own son, the one and only KID ROCK.
Kid Rock on Fox News with Megyn Kelly:
So enjoy the video, visit Detroit when in the area, listen to Kid Rock if you wish, and, last but not least: BE FREE.
GOD BLESS
5000 Ways You Know You're From Detroit
If you were living in Detroit, then 5000 Ways You Know You’re From Detroit is about and for YOU!
A taste of 5000 Ways You Know You’re From Detroit:
The ARSENAL OF DEMOCRACY –
How Detroit Won WWII & Saved Mankind from Fascism
The AMERICAN DREAM – Detroit’s population boomed after WWII
MotorTown: Detroit put the world on the wheels to become the MOTOR CITY
Detroit MUSIC: Birth of Motown, the Rise of Rock ‘n Roll, the music greats & near greats, the Grande Ball Room etc...
Detroit TV & RADIO: The Big 8, WKNR, WJZZ, Swingin’ Time, Bozo, Oopsy & Milky the Clown, Soupy Sales, Sagebrush Shorty, The Ghoul, Sonny Elliot, and many others
Detroit FOOD & DRINK: Lost Restaurants, Vernor’s, Faygo, Coney Islands, White Castle, Big Boy, etc...
Where we SHOPPED: Hudson’s, Sam’s, Kern’s, the malls, etc...
Detroit FUN SPOTS: Edgewater, Boblo, Cedar Point, State Fair, Belle Isle, Detroit Zoo and many others
Detroit FAVORITE LANDMARKS: the Big Tire, Big Fist, Big Stove, The Spirit of Detroit etc...
Detroit's STRUGGLES & REVOLUTIONS: beatniks, hippies, flower children, underground press, March to Freedom, ‘67 Riot/Uprising
Detroit SPORTS LEGENDS: Tigers, Lions, Wings, Pistons, Boxing, Wrestling …
AND SO MUCH MORE!
1,400+ photos & recollections of Detroit’s “Baby Boomer” years;
the unprecedented “Golden Era” of the 1950s
PLUS pre- & post- Boomer highlights!
YOU KNOW YOU’RE FROM DETROIT IF YOU CAN’T RESIST THIS BOOK!
Motor City HarleyFest
HarleyFest returns to its roots for its 15th year on June 10 & 11, 2017, at the all new Motor City Harley-Davidson dealership in Farmington Hills, MI. Spread over twelve acres, the new home for HarleyFest offers the ultimate experience for motorcycle enthusiasts and lovers of all things Harley-Davidson. This year, the party is bigger than ever, featuring FOUR huge national music acts: Theory of a Deadman, Saving Abel, Josh Todd of Buckcherry & Quiet Riot, plus twelve of the best local and regional bands.
In addition to the music, HarleyFest welcomes the Ives Brother’s Wall of Death Stunt Show, the Harley-Davidson Demo Truck, Detroit’s Sexiest Bagger contest, Biker Sound-Off Competition, horsepower shoot-out and Motor City Harley-Davidson will be giving away TWO brand new bikes! This will be the biggest HarelyFest yet, so don’t miss your opportunity to be a part of history!
I drove through the worst parts of Detroit, Michigan. This is what I saw.
Wow! Detroit has some really crazy areas! We begin our journey in Detroit on M102. No, that’s not a radio station. That’s 8 mile road.
We drove down 8 mile road on our way into Detroit. 8 mile road is north of Detroit, about 8 miles north of downtown.
Along the way, we saw many shuttered businesses, and other downtrodden sights.
Of course, 8 mile was made famous by the movie 8 mile, starring Eminem.
8 Mile Road has also always been the physical and cultural dividing line between the wealthier, predominantly white northern suburbs of Detroit and the poorer, predominantly black city.
You can see on this map exactly what I’m referring to. As we drive, heading west, on our left is the black population, where people earn about $30k a year, and on our right is the white population where people earn about $75k a year
Then, we left 8 mile road and hopped onto 75 South to head into Detroit proper..
We got off the 75 South at Grand Avenue and headed west. We read online that an area near Rosa Parks Blvd was particularly bad, so we went there first. As it turned out, this wasn’t even the worst area we would see.
At this point, we were 4 miles from downtown. For perspective you can see on this map where we were. The homes here were in pretty bad shape, but like what we had seen in Flint about two hours earlier, in many of these downtrodded neighborhoods, people were not outside. The streets were just eerily empty.
Did you know Detroit has lost ⅔ of its population?
I’ve been to east Cleveland once. That was really bad.
But in East Cleveland, at least they had houses, not just open spaces.
Detroit has lost 1.2 million people in the last 70 years. Of course, that’s because of the auto industry decline, mostly. That’s pretty common knowledge.
In the neighborhood we were in, rent was about $450 a month for the entire house. You can see why.
Now, we’re going to let this go for a minute or two and then take you to the worst area we saw that morning.
So we left that neighborhood and took Linwood, one of the really bad thoroughfares in Detroit. We wanted to go to the Northwest Goldberg neighborhood, which we read was one of the worst in the city.
Of course, Detroit has issues with crime and poverty. One in three people in Detroit lives in poverty. In 1950, 82% of Detroit was white. Now, it’s 82% black. And, of the top 12 employers in Detroit, all but 2 are government jobs. Meaning there’s not a lot of private enterprise here.
Of course, people talk of a Detroit resurgence. While the downtown area itself is improving and adding jobs, the outlying areas like this haven’t even been touched. And apparently, there are businesses who want to grow in Detroit, but they can’t find people who are either motivated or skilled to take those jobs. So the city is actively trying to recruit skilled people to the city, offering tax breaks and cheap housing.
But progress is progress, and there’s an air of hope and optimism among some Detroit folks. Mostly in areas not close to this.
For perspective here’s a map that shows where we are from downtown. We’re even closer to downtown and it’s really abandoned as we’ll see.
Now this neighborhood wasn’t really dangerous - at least we didn’t see any people lingering and never felt threatened. So whoever actually lives in this neighborhood was either hiding inside, sleeping or not home. Sometimes, you’d see a guy on a bike or a few people on their porch, but that was it.
But it was really interesting to see block after block where you would see large areas where homes were razed, and the city was essentially turning parts of the city back to nature. It’s an...urban prairie. The homes left are mostly gutted or have some sort of fire damage. Some of the alleys looked like hiking trails.
But it isn't scary. That’s because it’s early in the day, we can see, and we’re driving in a car that looks like an undercover cop car. So people are giving us a wide berth.
Now, we’re going to let this video just roll. We have about 15 minutes more of just footage, where we looked at different areas of Detroit - all on the city’s northwest end. For the most part, these areas were run down, but occasionally, as you’ll see there are small areas that aren’t too bad.
SUBSCRIBE to get REGIONAL INFORMATION about where YOU live:
Our goal is to combine recent data, fun videos, and thoughts about local culture into bite-sized snacks of shareable information. We call it bite-sized regional infotainment. We try to paint a picture of what’s happening in a region based on “Friday Night Science” — how’d you argue at a bar. To do that, we gather data from around the web to help determine a wide array of factors about where you live, things like safety, desirability, and culture.
We have another channel, too, which has other cool videos. Subscribe to it too
VIP Talent Connect Goes to Detroit Michigan! Amazing Models, Actors and Musicians
It was a super amazing day as the staff and family of VIP Talent Connect held the first industry power connecting talent event in Michigan. The top agencies flew in from around the United States to meet with the hand selected 125 out of over 50,000 applicants that wanted to attend!
Motor City To Bike City: Inside Detroit's Bicycle Renaissance | NBC News
See how the city once known as the car capital of the world is being transformed into a booming bike town.
» Subscribe to NBC News:
» Watch more NBC video:
NBC News is a leading source of global news and information. Here you will find clips from NBC Nightly News, Meet The Press, and our original series Debunker, Flashback, Nerdwatch, and Show Me. Subscribe to our channel for news stories, technology, politics, health, entertainment, science, business, and exclusive NBC investigations.
Connect with NBC News Online!
Visit NBCNews.Com:
Find NBC News on Facebook:
Follow NBC News on Twitter:
Follow NBC News on Google+:
Follow NBC News on Instagram:
Follow NBC News on Pinterest:
Motor City To Bike City: Inside Detroit's Bicycle Renaissance | NBC News
Digitized Stereo Slides of the 1960 National Auto Show at Detroit's Cobo Hall
This is a series of color stereo slides, preserved, converted and captured by Priceless Photo Preservation of Ann Arbor in spring 2013. They are of the 1960 National Auto Show, the first event of its kind to be held inside Detroit's Cobo Hall.
Read more about these slides at pricelessphotopreservation.wordpress.com
The slides in this show were digitized by Priceless Photo Preservation, an Ann Arbor firm of U-M trained archivists devoted to helping families in southeast and west Michigan, as well as northwest Ohio, preserve and digitize their most precious memories. We work with slides, photos, photo albums, letters, videos and films.
We are now located at 122 South Main Street
Suite 110 C inside downtown Ann Arbor's historic Goodyear Building. You can find more about us at
Detroit Redford High School Demolition Meijer Aerial Video
Meijer plans to replace the old Redford High School in Northwest Detroit with one of its big-box stores, providing a prime example of demolition with a plan in the Motor City.
The former Detroit Public Schools high school's architecture served as a staple of the the Old Redford, Grandmont, Rosedale Park and Brightmoor neighborhoods at 21431 W Grand River Ave since it was built in 1924. It graduated a number of notable national personalities, including George C Scott before it closed in 2007.
The current development plan calls for razing the empty 1 million square foot school to make way for a new Meijer big-box store. The $22 million project will feature a retail, grocery and garden center. The Michigan Economic Development Corp provided brownfield tax credits worth $3.3 million from the state and $6.5 million from local government entities.
In that respect it's a good thing there is a redevelopment plan, says Karen Nagher, former executive director of Preservation Wayne who now works consulting for historic redevelopment. But I wish there would have tried to find a way to put retail and office space in there.
A common lament among Metro Detroit's preservation community is that many of the region's historic structures are razed with no plan to redevelop the property, leaving an urban prairie of blighted vacant lots. Some closed Detroit Public Schools buildings with remarkable historic architecture have fallen by the wayside in this way, including the historic Cass Tech building. The redevelopment of the old Redford High School building represents a move toward demolition with a plan for these sorts of structures.
Source: Michigan Economic Development Corp and Karen Nagher, former executive director of Preservation Wayne
Writer: Jon Zemke
------- THE MUSIC -------
The Requiem Mass in D minor (K. 626) by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was composed in Vienna in 1791 and left unfinished at the composer's death on December 5. A completion by Franz Xaver Süssmayr was delivered to Count Franz von Walsegg, who had anonymously commissioned the piece for a requiem Mass to commemorate the February 14 anniversary of his wife's death.
It is one of the most enigmatic pieces of music ever composed, mostly because of the myths and controversies surrounding it, especially around how much of the piece was completed by Mozart before his death. The autograph manuscript shows the finished and orchestrated introit in Mozart's hand, as well as detailed drafts of the Kyrie and the sequence Dies Irae as far as the first nine bars of Lacrimosa, and the offertory. It cannot be shown to what extent Süssmayr may have depended on now lost scraps of paper for the remainder; he later claimed the Sanctus and Agnus Dei as his own. Walsegg probably intended to pass the Requiem off as his own composition, as he is known to have done with other works. This plan was frustrated by a public benefit performance for Mozart's widow Constanze. A modern contribution to the mythology is Peter Shaffer's 1979 play Amadeus, in which a mysterious messenger appeared and ordered Mozart to write a requiem mass, giving no explanation for the order. Mozart then came to believe that the piece was meant to be the requiem mass for his own funeral.
The Requiem is scored for 2 basset horns in F, 2 bassoons, 2 trumpets in D, 3 trombones (alto, tenor & bass), timpani (2 drums), violins, viola and basso continuo (cello, double bass, and organ). The vocal forces include soprano, contralto, tenor, and bass soloists and a SATB mixed choir.
-Harry Arnold
Horizon Film / iTVDetroit
contact me - itvdetroit@gmail.com
drones by - zeroXquads.com
Detroit: Present and Past
Give it a view help me out for my class! Please and thanks!
My finalized version of a project on Detroit and it's changes for my Freshman WRA class at Michigan State University. I filmed the video with my friend, Mike Ebaugh, who drove. I took archived film and added it to my film to show Detroit's changes from the past to now and to show that Detroit still has nice places and that we should have hope and believe that the city will one day be strong and thriving.
Archive film / other videos used in video:
1.) 60s Detroit Stock Footage
2.) Detroit Lives Pt. 1 of 3
Music Used in Video in order:
1.) The Betrayal by: Attack Attack!
2.) We Almost Lost Detroit by: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr.
3.) We Won't Back Down by: Eminem ft. P!nk
Northeastern High School Video Photo Album...Detroit, Michigan
Northeastern High School Video Photo Album...Detroit, Michigan
De Troit Photo Posse - The Trailer
Fun with friends on an outing organized by friends, Jeff and Eva Bannow. The photographers, connected through the fantastic film forum apug.org, go urban spelunking in the the ruins of the Packard Plant in Detroit.
ART-attack centre - Michigan Central station trial video
SUMMARY
Detroit is the largest city in the state of Michigan and was one of the most powerful industrial centres in the country. Hosting Ford, Chrysler and General Motors headquarters, the city had a huge metropolitan area which attracted workers who stablished there on the rise of industrialization. In the sixties European and Japanese automobile industries started to arrive to the United States. The quality of the Japanese product caused Detroit’s gradual loss in competitiveness and it is during these years that the city begins to desolate. Detroit currently has a total area of 359 km2, 800,000 empty structures and 33,500 abandoned homes. Most of them are in ruins and have come to auction for $1. The most emblematic abandonment is the central railway station, the Michigan Central Station.
PROPOSAL
Nonetheless, Detroit’s 21st century new industry is art. Artists from all over the world are coming to the city because of the low prices and affordable housing. A new youth generation sees Detroit as a free city where you can easily create. We propose to rehabilitate the abandoned Detroit’s central station to transform it into a hybrid building full of life, a centre for the Arts. Including spacious workshops, showrooms, selling points and meeting rooms. It will also be combined with artist’s residences and a small hotel for tourists that love art. A central station intended for people and culture interchange, with the purpose to regenerate the station’s area.
more info at:
How Detroit Became America's Warzone
Industrial Ghosts - USA (2013): Unemployment, poverty, gangs and drugs are just a few of the many problems facing the city of Detroit, labelled by some as 'America's warzone'
Subscribe to journeyman for daily uploads:
For similar stories see our Economy in Crisis playlist:
Homeless and Hopeless in Detroit:
Detroit: From Motown to Murder Town:
Detroit was once the symbol of America's industrial power; the birthplace of Ford, the assembly line and the home of GM. But now it feels more like a ghost town littered with abandoned buildings.
In 1913 Detroit was booming but when the Great Depression hit, this abruptly ended. Between 2006 and 2008 four of GM's plants in Michigan closed, and more than 15,000 are homeless in the city. There's no work in Michigan... all you see is vacant houses explains one homeless resident. As industries move to areas with cheaper labour, former assembly line workers and buildings are left useless.
Like us on Facebook:
Follow us on Twitter:
Follow us on Instagram:
For downloads and more information visit:
Authors: Anton Verstakov, Dmitry Gornostayev,
Voice: Robert McKenzie
Ref: 4048
Journeyman Pictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.
DETROIT: EASTERN MARKET MURALS - Among World's Top Five
One of the top destinations for visitors, locals, and Instagrammers in Detroit’s art scene is Eastern Market, where, in the past few years, over 125 murals have been created on buildings throughout the district. Each September, artists from around the world come to Detroit to create new murals during Murals in the Market. The popular festival just received big recognition internationally.
Smithsonian Magazine just named its top mural festivals from around the world, and included with festivals in the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Estonia, and Canada is the only U.S. fest on the list—Murals in the Market. The article notes the density of the collection in the district, and its plans for this year.
1xRun, the festival organizers, plan a “family reunion-themed block party” this year, along with guided tours September 22 and 29, plus 10,000 printed free maps for visitors to use as they walk through the district. We wanted to “create a physical piece that people can pick up, take around the neighborhood, and interact with the murals on a deeper level,” says 1xRun CEO Jesse Cory. 30 new murals are expected as part of the festival this year.
Murals in the Market also has a Patronicity campaign running. If the group raises $50,000, another $50,000 will be matched by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation. Funds will go toward the festival’s production and expenses.
This year’s artists include Sydney G. James, Sheefy, Pat Perry, Michelle Tanguay, and Ellen Rutt.
Patronicity describes it this way. Coming this September, Murals In The Market will return for the fourth consecutive year bringing large scale murals to Detroit's Historic Eastern Market! Through the generous support of our community partners, sponsors, friends and hundreds of talented local and international artists, Murals In The Market has helped bring 125+ murals to Detroit over the last three years. But we need your help! Please help us continue to make Murals In The Market one of the world's premier mural festivals by making a tax deductible donation to Eastern Market Corporation!
100% of the proceeds from this campaign will go towards the festival's production and expenses, and once we have reached our goal of $50,000 the Michigan Economic Development Corporation (MEDC) will match our fundraising dollar for dollar! With your help, we can continue to bring new vibrant public art to Detroit from some of today's most sought after local and international artists.
Join us this September 13th - 22nd, as 1xRUN, in partnership with Eastern Market Corporation, will curate and produce Murals in the Market 2018 and bring 30 new murals to Detroit's Eastern Market, bringing the total to 150 large scale murals throughout the 1 square mile market!
Activating the entire footprint of the Market District, Murals In The Market will also host over a dozen free community events for visitors of all ages, including artist lectures, children's workshops, neighborhood tours, art installations & exhibitions, block party concerts, and of course live mural painting.
For the past three years, millions of Detroit residents and visitors from around the world have visited Eastern Market to take see what has become the city's largest outdoor public art installation. Using the funds from this campaign, Murals In The Market will be able to continue to add to the Market's rich history of public art helping encourage exploration throughout the entire market District, as well as make the 100-year-old farmer's market one of the world's premier destinations for public art.
Just as one of the United States’ oldest farmers market provides quality fresh food for people from all walks of life, Murals In The Market brings groundbreaking artistic & cultural activations to the district showcasing hundreds of public works that are free and open to the public.
Helping unify local residents, traveling visitors and business owners of Detroit’s Historic Eastern Market through the power of public art, Murals In The Market strengthens and expands the footprint of the Market by activating new or underutilized spaces and facilitating compelling connections in the local community.
What to Expect in 2018
Over 30+ New Large Scale Murals + Public Art Installations
New Civic Sculptures Throughout Eastern Market
Over 20+ New Local Artists Join The 2018 Roster
Legacy Sign Painting Restoration On Local Businesses
New Engaging Street Level Public Art Installations
District-wide Activations Over 7 Days
2018 Kick Off mural by Pat Perry, Plus The 2018 Artists Roster Announcement June 29th
Family Reunion Block Party Concert Featuring DJ Jazzy Jeff + More...
How This Benefits the Community (YOU!)
Your contribution will help keep the legacy of public art alive in the city of Detroit. Your dollars will directly aid in purchasing supplies and equipment, and help us provide accommodations for traveling artists who become ambassadors for Detroit all around the world.
Chandler Park - Visit Detroit Parks
Aaron hosts Sheila at Detroit's Chandler park. Watch to see what the park has to offer and be sure to comment below to let us know what other parks these two should go see!
Throwback Trip To Belle Isle in Detroit Michigan
This is a trip we made to Belle Isle Park in the summer of 2016. Also in the beginning of the video we travel past The Heidelberg Project
Belle Isle, officially Belle Isle Park, is a 982-acre (1.534 sq mi; 397 ha) island park in the Detroit River, between the United States mainland and Canada. Owned by the City of Detroit, it is managed as a state park by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources through a 30-year lease initiated in 2013. Belle Isle is the largest city-owned island park in the United States and is the third largest island in the Detroit River after Grosse Ile and Fighting Island. It is connected to mainland Detroit by the MacArthur Bridge.
The island is home to the Belle Isle Aquarium, the Belle Isle Conservatory, the Belle Isle Nature Zoo, the Detroit Yacht Club on an adjacent island, the James Scott Memorial Fountain, the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, a Coast Guard station, a municipal golf course and numerous monuments. It also previously housed a Nature Center where visitors were able to traverse wooded trails and view wildlife natural habitats, a former Belle Isle Zoo, riding stables and the Detroit Boat Club. The island includes a half-mile (800 m) swimming beach.
Follow us on Instagram:
Check out some of our other Videos:
Click to watch us Taste Test Our July Japan Crate
Click to watch The Bean Boozled Challenge
Click to watch Bean Boozled Challenge Parents Edition
Click to watch The GoldFish Challenge
Click to watch The Bertie Botts Every Flavour Bean Challenge
Click to watch Our Toys R Us Candy Haul
Music:
Personal History in Detroit, Michigan
I got to go with my parents as they tracked down the house where they lived as newlyweds. Along the way, we saw a lot of the Detroit that was once our stomping grounds, and we also found my great-grandparents' house. Later, we stopped by the apartment where I spent my first days on this earth.
Detroit's Tragedy and How to Fix It
Detroit - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DetroitTraduzir esta página
Detroit /diˈtrɔɪt/ is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Michigan, and is the seat of Wayne County, the most populous County in the State of Michigan.
History of Detroit - Crime in Detroit - Demographic history of Detroit - Metro Detroit
detroits.uk.com: Introduction
detroits.uk.com/Traduzir esta página
The American 1950's food experience.
City of Detroit | Official City of Detroit Web site | detroitmi.gov
Official home page of Detroit including directory of city departments, calendar of events and press releases.
Detroit's Beautiful, Horrible Decline - Photo Essays - TIME
time.com/time/.../0,29307,1882089,00.htmlTraduzir esta página
Two French photographers immortalize the remains of the motor city on filmPhotographs by Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre.
THE OFFICIAL SITE OF THE DETROIT PISTONS - NBA.com
nba.com/pistons/Traduzir esta página
Official site containing basketball news, scores, audio and video files, player statistics, schedules, and profiles.
The Detroit News | Michigan news, sports, cars, entertainment and ...
detroitnews.com/Traduzir esta página
Detroit Michigan News - detroitnews.com is the home page of Detroit Michigan with in depth and updated Detroit local news. Stay informed with both Detroit ...
Detroit Tigers on Yahoo! Sports - News, Scores, Standings, Rumors ...
sports.yahoo.com/mlb/teams/detTraduzir esta página
Comprehensive and up-to-date Detroit Tigers news, scores, schedule, stats and roster.
Museus automobilísticos de Detroit - DiscoverAmerica.com
discoveramerica.com.br/usa/.../m/.../detroits-auto-museums.aspx
Planejando férias em Detroit, Michigan? Leia sobre o Museu Henry Ford, excursão à fábrica da Ford, Hall da Fama Automotivo e o Museu Chrysler.
Metro Detroit - Tourism and Travel | VisitDetroit.com - VisitDetroit.com
visitdetroit.com/Traduzir esta página
For the best information regarding metro Detroit tourism and travel, explore VisitDetroit.com. A trip to Detroit is a trip you won't soon forget.
Yves Marchand & Romain Meffre Photography - The Ruins of Detroit
marchandmeffre.com/detroit/Traduzir esta página
At the beginning of the 50's, plants were relocated in Detroit's periphery. The white middle-class began to leave the inner city and settled in new mass-produced ...