redford theatre detroit..mpg
detroit at the old redford theatre close to downtown.never thought this many people would show up for th trailer park boys.short.
Detroit's Historic Theater is now a Parking Garage
Second Channel -
Amazing history attached to this place. Detroit's Michigan Theater opened in 1926 and I'm sure it was an amazing site in it's heyday.
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Abandoned LA ZOO
Border wall at an abandoned beach
#detroit #michigan #mobileinstinct
Star Spangled Banner Old Redford Theater before the Bird
Awesome organist at the Old Redford before the showing of Hitchcock's The Birds w/ live guest appearance of Tippi Hendren.
Evergreen- Detroit mi
Driving North on Evergreen in Detroit Westside. Floods after the heavy rainstorm
DETROIT WILD CITY
Directed by Florent Tillo
80 min. | 2010 | France/USA
Once a shining testament to American capitalism, Detroit is now a shell of its former self. Compiling historical footage and interviews with the city's residents, Detroit Wild City explores the rise and fall of a city once the most industrialized in the United States. This meditative, French-made documentary vividly depicts the deserted urban prairie of Detroit and the modern pioneers who are rediscovering it.
Official Selection at 41 film festivals including: 2010 Copenhagen International Documentary Film Festival, 2011 San Francisco International Film Festival, and 2011 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.
Drinks x Design: Commerce Design Detroit Finalists
The 2019 Commerce Design: Detroit Awards where 10 professionally designed or renovated commercial spaces are recognized. See the highly competitive group of 20 finalists, representing a broad range of neighborhoods, business types, and scales.
Venue:
Redford Theatre
17360 Lahser Rd.
Detroit, MI 48219 United State
Organized by Design Core Detroit:
Design Core Detroit champions design-driven businesses and their role in strengthening Detroit’s economy.
#DrinksxDesign
Made in the heart of #Detroit.
Filmed and edited by Tiberius Fields
~
Fisher Building in Detroit MI
The Fisher Building (1928) is an ornate skyscraper in the New Center area of Detroit, Michigan, United States constructed of limestone, granite, and marble. Financed by the Fisher family with proceeds from the sale of Fisher Body to General Motors, the structure was designed to house office and retail space. The building was designated a National Historic Landmark on June 29, 1989. The building also contains the 2,089 seat Fisher Theatre. The building houses the headquarters of Detroit Public Schools.
Standing on the corner of West Grand Boulevard and Second Avenue in Detroit, Michigan, the Art Deco skyscraper lies in the heart of the New Center area of Detroit. The office building rises 30-stories with a roof height of 428 feet (130 m), a top floor height of 339 feet (103 m), and the spire reaching 444 feet (135 m). The building has 21 elevators. Designed by Albert Kahn and Associates with Joseph Nathaniel French as chief architect, it has been called Detroit's largest art object. and is widely considered Kahn's greatest achievement. The year of its construction, the Fisher building was honored by the Architectural League of New York as the year's most beautiful commercial structure. The opulent three-story barrel vaulted lobby is constructed with forty different kinds of marble, decorated by Hungarian artist Géza Maróti, and is highly regarded by architects.
abandoned school, Detroit Michigan
Miller Junior High School Millerite-Trojans Alumni 2015 Reunion Picnic...Detroit, Michigan
Miller Junior High School Millerite-Trojans Alumni 2015 Reunion Picnic...Detroit, Michigan
Sidney D. Miller Junior High School Remember Back When?...Detroit, Michigan
Our Millerite Trojans Annual Alumni Reunion, Is Always The 2nd (Sunday) In August, Every Year, On The School Open Field...
Mosaic Youth Theatre to move into old Miller High School, launching partnership with charter school
modeldmedia.com/devnews/mosaicyouththeatremillerhigh... Cached
Mosaic Youth Theatre to move into old Miller High School, ... Prep Science & Math Elementary School: Sidney D. Miller ... of Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit
The Sidney D. Miller Middle School, also known as the Sidney D. Miller Junior High and High School, is a school building located at 2322 DuBois Street in Detroit, Michigan. It served as a high school from 1933 to 1957, and was significant as the de facto high school serving African American students in Detroit. It was designated a state of Michigan Historic Site in 1986 and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011.
Detroit experienced a phenomenal[clarification needed increase in population during the 1910s. To accommodate the influx of residents and their children, numerous schools were built during the decade. Ground was broken for what was then called the Dubois School in 1918; the school was intended to serve as a junior high. The school was designed by the architectural firm of Malcomson and Higginbotham, the architects of nearly all Detroit Public Schools in the period 1894 to 1923, and constructed at a cost on $245,616. In 1919, the still unfinished building was renamed the Sidney D. Miller Intermediate School. Sidney D. Miller (1830–1904) was a former president of the Detroit Board of Education, as well as of the Detroit Health Commission and Police Commission. However, construction plans were changed several times, and the school was not opened to students until 1921. The building itself was finally completed in 1922.
During the 1920s, the city's population continued to grow, stretching the capacity of the school system. An addition to Miller, including a girl's gymnasium, was completed in 1931. Although the area around the school was predominantly white when the building opened, the percentage of African Americans in the Black Bottom neighborhood increased so that soon it was predominantly black. Parents of white students at nearby Eastern High School complained about the rising Black student population, and in response the Detroit School Board converted Miller to a senior high school in 1933. A liberal school transfer policy allowed white students zoned to Miller to attend Eastern, which left Miller as the de facto, if not de jure, African-American High school.
The school is significant in part because of its association with the education of African American students, beginning in 1933. From 1933 to 1957, it served as the main, but unofficial, secondary school for black students. Due in part to concerns from the black community, the School Board installed a number of Black teachers and administrators at Miller. However, in 1955, steps were taken to end the de facto segregation of the Detroit School system, and in 1957 the building was converted back into a middle school. It remained a middle school for 50 years, and was closed in 2007.
1919-1957 (dissertation), Wayne State University
Miller High School Alumni Association: Employer Identification Number (EIN) 382854898: Name of Organization: Miller High School Alumni Association: In Care of Name
— at Miller High School.
— with Brewster Timers at Miller High School.
Detroit minute
Detroit days
The Alger: A Renovation Story: Part I
A Stream Detroit Original Series. Created By: Jeff Wegner
In the heart of Detroit's east side The Alger Theater's empowering stately art deco fashion overlooks the corner of E. Warren & E. Outer Dr. Designed & built by George Washington Trendle of United Detroit Theaters in 1935, the Alger is one of Detroit's few remaining neighborhood cinema houses. Recent renovations commissioned by the Friends of the Alger Theater have opened all the doors to the Alger, setting free over half a century of memories shared within the masonry. In the Board of Director's pursuit to continue the renovation process they invite a neighborhood filmmaker who has already experienced the Alger's allure to join them by documenting the history & future of The Alger. Become a member AlgerTheater.org
Detroit Remember When II
After exploring Detroits rich history, its musical legacy, impressive architecture and politics, travel back 100 years and celebrate the city that put the world on wheels and the people whose lives were changed forever in Detroit Remember When II: The American Dream and the Automobile. From the vision of the assembly line to the roar of the V-8, see how Detroits promise of a better life attracted thousands to The City of Champions, with its sport legends, theaters and landmarks.
Road Trip 2013 Detroit MI, Downtown
Trip 2013
Under the Radar Michigan Episode 321 - Detroit
On this episode of Under the Radar Michigan, we're in Detroit for an exotic pop-up restaurant....we'll also show you how the city's getting greener and how the Redford Theater is still making movie magic, then we discover an American bistro with a European flair and a Soul Food foundation and an urban orchard that is growing the Paw Paw fruit.
America's Thanksgiving Parade 2017
Donyetta Hill Speaks About Brewster-Wheeler At Business In The Black Event...Detroit, Michigan
Help Support, Join And Connect With Us On Facebook, Youtube, Google, Reverbnation, Twitter, Flickr, Instagram And Tumblr...
On (Saturday) February 28th, 2015
The 20th anniversary of Black Business Pioneers, The Real Deal Hosted by Anthony Brogdon, Producer of The Great Detroit. It will be held at MSU Detroit Center, 3408 Woodward, 12-3pm complimentary admission.
Black Bottom Hasting Street Paradise Valley... Detroit, Michigan
Black Bottom, Detroit
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Black Bottom was a predominantly black neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan, that was demolished and replaced with Lafayette Park in the 1960s. The Black Bottom–Paradise Valley area on the city's east side became known for its significant contribution to American music including Blues, Big Band, and Jazz from the 1930s to the 1950s. It was located on Detroit's near East Side bounded by Gratiot Avenue, Brush Street, Vernor Highway, and the Grand Trunk railroad tracks.
The French gave the Black Bottom area its name because of its fertile, dark topsoil. The name is not a reference to black people.
The area's main commercial avenues were Hastings and St. Antoine streets. An adjacent north-bordering area known as Paradise Valley contained night clubs where famous Blues, Big Band, and Jazz artists such as Duke Ellington, Billy Eckstine, Pearl Bailey, Ella Fitzgerald, and Count Basie regularly performed. In 1941, the city's Orchestra Hall was named Paradise Theatre. Aretha Franklin's father, the Reverend C. L. Franklin, first opened his New Bethel Baptist Church on Hastings Street. Hastings Street, which ran north-south through Black Bottom, had been an area populated by immigrants before World War I. With ethnic succession, by the 1950s it became an African-American community of black-owned business, social institutions, and night clubs. Historically, this area was the source of the River Savoyard, which was buried as a sewer in 1836. Its rich soils are the source of the name Black Bottom. Detroit's Broadway Avenue Historic District contains a sub-district sometimes called the Harmonie Park District which has taken on the renowned legacy of Detroit's music from the 1930s through the 1950s and into the present.
Black Bottom endured the Great Depression, with many of its residents working in factories. Following World War II, the physical structures of Black Bottom were in need of replacement. In the early 1960s, the City of Detroit demolished the Black Bottom district as part of an urban renewal project. The area was replaced by the Chrysler Freeway (Interstate 75 and Interstate 375) and Lafayette Park, a residential development designed by Mies van der Rohe and intended as a model neighborhood. It combined residential townhouses, apartments and high-rises with commercial areas. Many of the residents relocated to large public housing projects such as the Brewster-Douglass Housing Projects Homes and Jeffries Homes.
Historically, its primary business district was in an area bounded by Vernor, John R., Madison, and Hastings. Gratiot Avenue passed through that business district. The business district included hotels, restaurants, music stores, bowling alleys, shops, policy offices, and grocery stores. There were 17 nightclubs in that business district. (606 Horseshoe Lounge, Club Plantation, Club 666)
1.^ Jump up to: a b Baulch, Vivian (August 7, 1996). Paradise Valley and Black Bottom. The Detroit News. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
Woodford, Arthur M (2001). This is Detroit, 1701-2001. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 9780814329146.
(External links)
Lafayette Park/Mies van der Rohe Historic District
Paradise Valley Marker
Walter P. Reuther Library
When Detroit paved over paradise: The story of I-375
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WATCH: Full 2019 America's Thanksgiving Parade
Urban Exploration in Detroit
Exploring abandoned buildings around Detroit
You can find these pics at :
Music - Lose Yourself by Eminem
Locations:
Brewster Recreation Center
Campus Ballroom
Continental Motors
Detroit Animal Art Museum
Detroit City High School
Detroit Police Precinct 16
East Town Theater
Fisher Plant 21
Holcomb Elementary School
Hosmer Elementary School
Hutchins Intermediate School
Jackson Middle School
Kronk Gym and Recreation Center
Lee Plaza Hotel
Lutheran Parish House
National Theater
Naval Armory
Packard Plant
Park Avenue Building
Schroeder Paint and Glass
St. Agnes Church
St. Agnes School
St Davids School
St. Margaret Mary Church
St. Margaret Mary School
St. Rita Church
St. Rita School
Tried stone Church
Vanity Ballroom
Woods Cathedral
Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church
Thurston's 2010-2011 Ensemble Slideshow
Slideshow I made of Thurston High School's 2010-2011 Ensemble Theater class :)
If I stole your pictures, I'm sorry haha
Song: Weekend Warriors by A Change of Pace
Ensemble Stars: :)
Kristin Adair
Anna Bartle
Joelle Corzine
Daniel Courter
Ryan Dawes
Jon Edwards
Cassidi Ellsworth
Connie Ferchland
Andraya Funke
Nick Hecker
Cristina Hernandez
Caleb Hunter
Christina Lee
Kalisse Montague
Taressa Moretti
Riley Peel
Ulises Perez
Michael Peters
Justin Reinhart
Kelsea Rowland
Erica Wiebelhaus
& our wonderful teacher Andy Hock
Eminem Childhood Home Demolished (19946 Dresden St)
Detroit, Michigan