Dan Gilbert's Quest To Remake Downtown Detroit

NYT Lauds Billionaire's 'Rescue Mission' For Detroit
DETROIT, MI - SEPTEMBER 12: Dan Gilbert, Chairman, Rock Ventures and Quicken Loans, speaks at TECHONOMYDETROIT September 12, 2012 in Detroit, Michigan. The event, hosted by the Detroit Economic Club, is a one-day multidisciplinary gathering of national and local leaders about reigniting U.S. competitiveness, creating jobs, and revitalizing our cities in a technologized age. (photo by Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)
DETROIT, MI - SEPTEMBER 12: Dan Gilbert, Chairman, Rock Ventures and Quicken Loans, speaks at TECHONOMYDETROIT September 12, 2012 in Detroit, Michigan. The event, hosted by the Detroit Economic Club, is a one-day multidisciplinary gathering of national and local leaders about reigniting U.S. competitiveness, creating jobs, and revitalizing our cities in a technologized age. (photo by Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)

THE best way to experience all that is strange and a little otherworldly about downtown Detroit is to walk the streets around 5 p.m. on a weekday. At that hour, you’ll notice not just the peculiarity of what is around you — notably, the gorgeous, Art Deco skyscrapers alongside empty, decrepit buildings — but also what is missing. There is no traffic here. As the workday ends, cars trickle out of underground parking lots and speed off to nearby highways, but in a volume that doesn’t cause delays.

Downtown Detroit once buzzed with activity, but the city has lost about a quarter of its population over the last decade.
It is just one small sign of how far Detroit’s fortunes have fallen: the birthplace of the mass-produced automobile, the city that gave us the infuriating, bumper-to-bumper commute, is now so sparsely populated that it doesn’t have a rush hour.

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