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Thursday, July 05, 2007

Sign Of Blight



I read this story and thought to myself this doesn't describe Memphis at all. Unlike most predominately Black cities, Memphis is headed in a totallly different direction. Read what a blogger had to say:

Detroit being reclaimed by nature.

The new issue of Detroit being reclaimed by nature.
The new issue of Harpers Weekly features an article on “post-Industrial” Detroit.

Detroit has long been one of the largest majority black cities in America. It has been on a steady decline for decades. Now pheasants, turkey, and foxes roam the streets while vegetation grows on high-rises.

A Detroit Blogger describes the situation…

Even downtown, abandoned skyscrapers, with windows left open to the elements, become giant pigeon coops, with upper floors covered in inches of pigeon droppings, as generation after generation of pigeons live uninterrupted by humans in the middle of a major downtown. Buildings like the Wurlitzer, the Lafer and the Broderick house hundreds of pigeons between them.

Trees up to two or three stories tall rise up from the roofs of a number of local skyscrapers, like the Metropolitan, Charlevoix and Lafayette buildings, and hotels like the Fort-Shelby, and used to rise from the Statler and Book Cadillac hotels. A bushy tree rises higher each year from the Detroit Building’s roof on Park Avenue.

Probably the most visible wildlife in the city are the roving packs of wild dogs in Detroit neighborhoods. Groups of usually four to seven dogs, each litter progressively wilder and stranger-looking than their predecessors, roam through even well-kept neighborhoods, occasionally making the news when they attack someone, usually children or mail carriers.

Probably the most famous symbol of wildlife’s reclamation of the city are the stubborn trees referred to locally as ghetto palms. Known for their ubiquitousness in Detroit’s alleys, empty lots and fence borders between homes, the Ailanthus altissima, also called the Tree of Heaven, was imported from China in 1784 and spread through the city like a weed. It’s a very hardy species, able to grow in very small amounts of soil, requiring little sunlight or water, and able to withstand all sorts of soil pollutants, as anyone who’s tried to rid their property of them can confirm.

You can use their height as a gauge of how long a particular parcel has been neglected. In some areas they reach several stories high

6 comments:

  1. Good to see you are back to blogging.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good to have you reading.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous3:47 AM

    It's happening in Memphis as we speak.




    Abandoned Apartments Breeding Crime

    Last Update: Jul 18, 2007 10:26 PM

    Posted By: Dana Rebik

    Eyewitness News Everywhere uncovers havens for crime. Crooks, drug dealers and hookers are taking over vacant houses and apartments. The buildings are left to rot and few get torn down.
    The Marina Cove Apartment Complex in Hickory Hill is one example.

    "The location has been abandoned, there's no sense of law and order so people will come in and do whatever they want to do. Prostitution, drug dealing, all those kinds of things," says Michael Heidingsfield of the Memfrica Shelby Crime Commission.

    In 2003, Memfrica Code Enforcement ruled Marina Cove unsafe to occupy and everyone moved out. Since then, people have set part of the building on fire, broken windows and sprayed gang graffiti all over it.

    "It's the whole issue of blight breeding crime," says Hydingsfield.

    A man named Ronnie Davis is the owner of Marina Cove. We are told he lives out of state. At the complex, there were dozens of notices stapled to the management office door. We also found a stack of envelopes addressed to Mr. Davis that were returned to sender by the post office

    Code enforcement reports since February 2004, there has been no progress made dealing with Mr. Davis or getting any work done. Now, the property is approved for demolition, but the case is still in court.

    ReplyDelete