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- THE WEEK, Page 22NATIONAn Experiment in Urban Homesteading
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- Detroit finds a way to bring new hope to a devastated downtown
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- For most Detroit residents, the inferno that swept through a
- run-down boardinghouse, killing 10 mostly elderly and disabled
- residents, was one more reminder of how decrepit the city's
- housing stock has become. Detroit has averaged one new housing
- start annually for the past 17 years, among the lowest building
- rates in the nation. But last week, in a counterpoint to the
- sorrow of the deadliest fire in nearly 50 years, the city also
- offered a sign of hope. As the choir of gospel singers sang and
- the mayor beamed, Detroit opened its first new inner-city
- housing development in 30 years.
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- In the bleeding heart of downtown, near a city power works
- and a Chrysler assembly plant, Victoria Park offers serene,
- curving streets and handsome colonial- and Cape Cod-style homes.
- The incongruous setting did not deter builders from snapping up
- city-owned lots for a dollar apiece, then designing gracious
- homes with porch decks, two-car garages and cathedral ceilings.
- Buyers, unfazed by the city's mean reputation, grabbed 70 of the
- 86 available houses, for prices that were typically 25% less
- than comparable homes in the suburbs. Among the first new
- owners: a Desert Storm nurse, a church minister and an IRS
- agent. Cheered Detroit's crusty mayor Coleman Young: "We are
- building a new town in town, one neighborhood at a time."
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