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Ford to revamp Detroit book warehouse into innovation hub
<p style="text-align: center;"><img title="1605677318120338.jpg" alt="8.jpg" src="/ueditor/php/upload/image/20201118/1605677318120338.jpg"/></p><p>&nbsp;Ford&nbsp;Motor Co. revealed plans Tuesday to transform a long-vacant book warehouse into a hub for&nbsp;automobile innovation&nbsp;in Detroit&#39;s oldest neighborhood.<br/><br/>Corktown, long known for its wood-framed houses, restaurants and taverns, is the site of the automaker&#39;s planned $740 million project to create a place where new transportation and mobility ideas are nurtured and developed.<br/><br/>The Dearborn, Michigan-based company&#39;s foray into Corktown started with its 2018 acquisition of the massive Michigan Central train station and other buildings in the neighborhood just west of downtown.<br/></p><p><br/></p><p>When work is completed, the 30-acre (12.1 hectare) site will have more than 1 million square feet (304,800 meters) of commercial space.<br/><br/>&quot;This is a really, authentically beautiful neighborhood. It&#39;s really important that we maintain its integrity,&quot; said Mary Culler, Ford&#39;s Detroit development director and president of the Ford Foundation.<br/><br/>For decades, Corktown stood in the long shadow of the hulking 17-story train station. After being vacated in 1988, the building epitomized Detroit&#39;s blight and economic despair amid the city&#39;s steadily shrinking manufacturing base and exodus of people.<br/><br/>Between the 1950s and 2010, Detroit lost more than 1 million residents. Stable, middle- and blue-collar neighborhoods were emptied of families. Houses became vacant, stripped of metal and anything else of value before collapsing or razed into mounds of wood and other debris.<br/><br/>Through it all, the train station remained standing - too costly to demolish, too large for other uses, and a contradiction to its once-ornate grandeur.<br/><br/>The depot opened in late 1913 and was designed by the same architects who created New York&#39;s Grand Central Terminal. Like other train stations across the U.S., Detroit&#39;s became seemingly obsolete as interest in traveling by rail waned.</p><p><br/></p><p>Businessman Manuel &quot;Matty&quot; Moroun bought the building in the mid-1990s after a previous owner defaulted on a loan, but an anchor tenant could not be found.<br/><br/>Two years ago, Ford stepped in, bought the building and started fixing up 500,000-square-foot (46,000-square-meter) structure. Work should be completed by the end of 2022.<br/><br/>Ford expects to have about 2,500 of its own people and 2,500 partner employees working on the campus that will focus on autonomous vehicles. About 250 workers in Ford&#39;s autonomous vehicle business unit already work out of The Factory, another building near the train station.<br/><br/>The former Detroit school&#39;s Book Depository was designed by famed architect Albert Kahn. It has been vacant following a 1987 fire. The Detroit office of global architecture firm Gensler is working with Ford to renovate the building. Construction will start early next year. Move-in is expected in early 2022.<br/><br/>&quot;The Book Depository is going to be the heart of the innovation district ... a mixed-use maker space for partners to come in and solve problems,&quot; Culler said. &quot;We think that this project is really pivotal for Ford and the city.&quot;<br/><br/>A greenway will connect 7 acres behind the train station to the city&#39;s west riverfront, while the train platform and tracks will be repurposed as a technology testing and showcase area. It also is expected to feature pedestrian and bike paths.<br/><br/>The walkable community will connect the train station campus to surrounding neighborhoods.<br/><br/>New York-based Practice for Architecture and Urbanism is the lead architect and strategic planner for the 30-acre site.<br/><br/>Ford&#39;s plans fit into what Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan and&nbsp;the Detroit Economic Growth Corp.&nbsp;have envisioned for Corktown, according to Katy Trudeau, the city&#39;s deputy director for planning and development.<br/><br/>&quot;There were people nervous about the significant impact the project would have on residents and housing prices,&quot; Trudeau said. &quot;People were concerned that their neighbors who were renters might be displaced due to rising prices.&quot;<br/><br/>In some cases, rents have doubled - something residents worried about after Ford&#39;s 2018 announcement, said Debra Walker, who moved into Corktown about 20 years ago.<br/><br/>&quot;Everybody is seeing dollar signs, so rents are going up,&quot; said Walker, 67, who is retired. &quot;You can still make your money, this is America. But what can we do to keep the neighborhood diverse?&quot;<br/><br/>The city is seeking a competitive federal grant that would help fund up to 800 new affordable housing units in Corktown.<br/><br/>&quot;With all of the economic development happening in Corktown, it is critical that there is affordable housing developed alongside it,&quot; said Donald Rencher, Detroit Housing &amp; Revitalization director. &quot;Given the tremendous investment and trends that we are seeing, we are at an important time to ensure Corktown remains a place where Detroiters of all walks of life are welcome.&quot;<br/><br/>Some Ford employees at The Factory already live in the neighborhood, Culler said.<br/><br/>&quot;It is more than just the train station. We want to be a good neighbor there,&quot; she said.<br/></p>
18 Nov,2020
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