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Archive for the 'Concerts' Category

Jul 28 2008

Detroit Neighborhoods: Urban Living at its Best in Midtown

The Midtown Neighborhood in Detroit, which includes the University Cultural Center, boasts a rich history, and is a shining example of the exciting redevelopment efforts in the past several years. If you are looking for a disverse and walkable community that is both old and new, it would behoove you to think about locating to Midtown Detroit.

Midtown is a large area in, naturally, the middle of Detroit, bordered roughly by the John C Lodge Freeway on the west, the I-75 Freeway curving around on the south and east, and the I-94 Freeway on the north. Within the 2-square-mile radius of Midtown, there are two radio stations, three historic inns, eleven art galleries, thirty-five restaurants and internet cafes, six museums, nine theatres, a hardware store, a dry cleaners, grocery stores, specialty shops, and bookstores, a world-class medical center, a major university, and lofts, townhomes, and apartments.

In the early 20th century, the Midtown Area was centered around the automobile industry, and was filled with auto dealerships; especially on Cass Avenue.

Beginning in the late 1800s, many of the libraries and museums of Detroit were built in the area, ostensibly to be close to what was then the original Detroit Central High School (built in 1858 as the first public high school in Detroit and Michigan) and what became Wayne State University, Michigan’s only urban research university.

The Cultural Center is aptly named because of the concentration of many of the city’s museums and art galleries. The Main Detroit Public Library is located on Woodward, and is right across the street from the Detroit Institute of Arts. Also in the Cultural Center: the Detroit Historical Museum–which has the very popular “Old Detroit” exhibition, the Children’s Museum School, the Charles H. Wright Museum of African-American History, the Center for Creative Studies, the Friends of First Living Museum–featuring a live reactment of the Underground Railroad, the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (MOCAD), and the Detroit Science Center. There are also over a dozen theater and performing arts venues and other educational institutions, including the Max M. Fisher Music Center–home of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the IMAX Dome Theatre, and the Detroit School of the Arts.

Today, Midtown is exploding with both commercial and residential properties both for purchase and lease. Lofts rebuilt from historial commercial buildings of the 19th and 20th centuries, new condominum townhomes, updated carriage houses, and refurbished mansions in the Brush Park Historic District are all available.

 
For more information, visit the website of the University Cultural Center Association.
Shameless Plug: read my husband’s blog, The “D” Spot.

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Jul 17 2008

This Weekend in Detroit: Concert of Colors

If it’s summer in Detroit, it’s Festival Time! One of the biggest and best is the Concert of Colors, now celebrating its 15th year. Heralded as “metro Detroit’s FREE and annual diversity music festival, the Concert of Colors is the largest festival of its kind in the USA. This year, the festival begins today, July 17, and runs through Sunday July 22.

The Concert of Colors started out in Chene Park with just a few thousand people, but grew to more than 10,000 in 1999, and then to 100,000 as the festival expanded to a 3-day event in 2005 in conjunction with Detroit’s 300th birthday celebration.

A wonderful venue change occurred in 2005, when the festival moved to the completely remodeled and still acoustically perfect Orchestra Hall at the Max M. Fisher Music Center in Midtown Detroit, home of world-renowned The Detroit Symphony Orchestra. In addition to the indoor concerts, there is also one outdoor stage. The festival expanded to four days in 2007.

In addition to the musical focus, there are also ethnic foods and crafts vendors, family and children’s activities, arts and crafts, and the 3rd Annual Forum on Community, Culture, and Race sponsored by New Detroit; this year the Forum will be on Friday.

The Concert of Colors Festival is made possible with the wonderful assistance of many corporate and media sponsors and non-profit presenters and co-sponsors.

Headliners this year include: Mitch Ryder, Mavis Staples, Don Was, Black Bottom Collective, and many more artists from around the world; a celebration of the diversity in the Detroit Metroplex. Artists will be performing on the Chrysler Main Stage, the Comerica Charitable Foundation Diversity Stage, and the Outdoor Rhythm Stage. Check out the full schedule, and get ready to party with diversity in The “D”!

Shameless Plug for my husband’s blog: Read The “D” Spot!


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