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  #201  
Old August 24th, 2009, 12:27 AM
kraig kraig is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
Where did anyone say it was the DEGC's responsibility?

It doesn't change the fact that the city is ultimately responsible for the building's current condition. They had the opportunity to fine, lien, and prosecute the building's owners.

Failing those attempts, they had an obligation as new owners of a foreclosed building to secure it for future marketing- it's destroying what could have been an asset that the taxpayers took back from private enterprise- so the city failed in it's fiduciary responsibility to the taxpayers- the real oweners of this foreclosed building.

I was simply explaining that the DEGC doesn't have the authority to prosecute the building's owners. As you just pointed out, that is the responsibility of various city departments. So there's no need to argue on that point. We both realize that the DEGC became involved after the City's departments did or did not take whatever action that should have been taken. Therefore, my point was that the DEGC is not able to, or authorized, to perform some type of do-over on behalf of the city departments. They, the DEGC, must make decisions based on the situation that exist when they become involved. I don't see where that's so hard to grasp.
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  #202  
Old August 24th, 2009, 12:34 AM
buildingsofdetroit buildingsofdetroit is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AroundTown View Post
A "harvester" of artifacts? You mean a looter.
No, I mean someone who pays for salvage rights.
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  #203  
Old August 24th, 2009, 08:57 AM
digitalvision digitalvision is offline
 
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This is not a population problem, this is a market demand problem.

Due to the craptastic economy in this state as well as poor image and management by government, there's no demand for those buildings. Where there is demand, people are going to the other business centers of the region because our state's economic policy for the most part encourages it. It is consistently cheaper in Michigan to build new than rehab, because building new is highly subsidized and land available cheap.

Focus all this back-and-forth energy on the demand part of the equation. That'll actually fix the problem.
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  #204  
Old August 24th, 2009, 09:27 AM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kraig View Post
I was simply explaining that the DEGC doesn't have the authority to prosecute the building's owners. As you just pointed out, that is the responsibility of various city departments. So there's no need to argue on that point. We both realize that the DEGC became involved after the City's departments did or did not take whatever action that should have been taken. Therefore, my point was that the DEGC is not able to, or authorized, to perform some type of do-over on behalf of the city departments. They, the DEGC, must make decisions based on the situation that exist when they become involved. I don't see where that's so hard to grasp.

It's not hard to grasp, but it wasn't what I had posted earlier, either. In fact I've never even typed the acronym DEGC until yesterday.

Now that we're clear on that, we can agree then it was the city's responsibility to have secured, and provided a safe building for future development.

At this point, the DEGC needs to recuse itself from any involvement in the Lafayette.

Where are the consumer tax watch-dogs starting a lawsuit against Detroit for wasting public money on demolitions? That would be an interesting discussion.
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  #205  
Old August 24th, 2009, 12:14 PM
bailey bailey is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
Where are the consumer tax watch-dogs starting a lawsuit against Detroit for wasting public money on demolitions? That would be an interesting discussion.
Well, to get anywhere, you'd first need a consensus that the demolition is a "waste". There are 30 pages of posts on three or four threads debating that issue.
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  #206  
Old August 24th, 2009, 01:02 PM
kraig kraig is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
It's not hard to grasp, but it wasn't what I had posted earlier, either. In fact I've never even typed the acronym DEGC until yesterday.

Now that we're clear on that, we can agree then it was the city's responsibility to have secured, and provided a safe building for future development.

At this point, the DEGC needs to recuse itself from any involvement in the Lafayette.

Where are the consumer tax watch-dogs starting a lawsuit against Detroit for wasting public money on demolitions? That would be an interesting discussion.
It's common knowledge that the DDA/DEGC was responsible for the attempts at re-development, as well as, the demolition process. That's why I mentioned them.
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  #207  
Old August 24th, 2009, 01:39 PM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kraig View Post
It's common knowledge that the DDA/DEGC was responsible for the attempts at re-development, as well as, the demolition process. That's why I mentioned them.
No problems. I never mentioned either agency in my posts regarding the Lafayette, other than my dismay at the situation being allowed to get to this point in the first place.
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  #208  
Old August 24th, 2009, 01:45 PM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bailey View Post
Well, to get anywhere, you'd first need a consensus that the demolition is a "waste". There are 30 pages of posts on three or four threads debating that issue.
That isn't the debate, nor the topic here.

It has only come to this point due to the negligence of the city, since it had a fiduciary responsibility to the taxpayers not to waste taxpayer dollars on needless demolitions.

The Lafayette would not be in the condition it's in, had the city fined, liened, or prosecuted the Schwartz character who owned it in the first place.

That failing, (as I have mentioned before) the city, as new owner of a foreclosed property, needed to hire security, block in the windows, whatever was necessary to secure the property for future development/resale.

Treating it as an asset instead of a liability would have been the prudent thing to do, and it wasn't done.

Thus, the city has been in the driver's seat with regard to the future of this building from the day the previous owner decided to let it fall into disrepair.

Now the city is spending stimulus (our) money on demolishing it. I guess the only positive here, is that it's "stimulating" work for demolition contractors, thus providing jobs.
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  #209  
Old August 24th, 2009, 02:52 PM
ndavies ndavies is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
That isn't the debate, nor the topic here.

It has only come to this point due to the negligence of the city, since it had a fiduciary responsibility to the taxpayers not to waste taxpayer dollars on needless demolitions.

The Lafayette would not be in the condition it's in, had the city fined, liened, or prosecuted the Schwartz character who owned it in the first place.

That failing, (as I have mentioned before) the city, as new owner of a foreclosed property, needed to hire security, block in the windows, whatever was necessary to secure the property for future development/resale.

Treating it as an asset instead of a liability would have been the prudent thing to do, and it wasn't done.

Thus, the city has been in the driver's seat with regard to the future of this building from the day the previous owner decided to let it fall into disrepair.

Now the city is spending stimulus (our) money on demolishing it. I guess the only positive here, is that it's "stimulating" work for demolition contractors, thus providing jobs.
Sorry that is just your opinion. And your opinion doesn't roll back time and put the buildings back into a usable state.

My opinion is I can't see why the city would waste valuable economic resources boarding up and mothballing an obsolete building, one that will never be used again, when it is far more cost effective to just tear the damn thing down.

I'm guessing that if you polled detroiters you would find far more people with my opinion than yours. More importantly, I would expect far more Detroit voters to believe it needs to go. They are the only ones that should matter to the people running the city.

This is exactly what this thread is about. You value an obsolete building. The people disagreeing with you don't want to waste money on a building that can't be saved.
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  #210  
Old August 24th, 2009, 03:19 PM
EastSider EastSider is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
Treating it as an asset instead of a liability would have been the prudent thing to do, and it wasn't done.
Commercial property is an asset only when it is generating rent. Its extended vacancy, even through the bubble years of the last 13 or so, is evidence that it was not a sound investment even with the easy credit.
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  #211  
Old August 24th, 2009, 03:36 PM
ghettopalmetto ghettopalmetto is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ndavies View Post
My opinion is I can't see why the city would waste valuable economic resources boarding up and mothballing an obsolete building, one that will never be used again, when it is far more cost effective to just tear the damn thing down.
Where are the numbers that support this conclusion? Are they readily available for Xeroxing at the offices of DEGC? Or does one have to file a FOIA request?
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  #212  
Old August 24th, 2009, 06:38 PM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ndavies View Post
Sorry that is just your opinion. And your opinion doesn't roll back time and put the buildings back into a usable state.

My opinion is I can't see why the city would waste valuable economic resources boarding up and mothballing an obsolete building, one that will never be used again, when it is far more cost effective to just tear the damn thing down.

I'm guessing that if you polled detroiters you would find far more people with my opinion than yours. More importantly, I would expect far more Detroit voters to believe it needs to go. They are the only ones that should matter to the people running the city.

This is exactly what this thread is about. You value an obsolete building. The people disagreeing with you don't want to waste money on a building that can't be saved.
Well, it seems you've engendered the majority of citywide opinion on your side of this issue, so what do you do for an encore?

So, in your estimation, when the city gets a building back for taxes, and it's either still occupied, or just vacated, perfectly salvagable, that it should immediately be torn down?

I guess you would have pulled the plug on the Book Cadillac and Fort Shelby as well. We could name dozens more that you would have done the same with, I'm sure.

Your viewpoint is wasteful, backward, and a loser for all sides.

So you think spending a little to secure a building that in it's better condition, years ago, would have given it a fighting chance at restoration and reuse is worse than spending millions to waste a perfectly good building for an empty lot?

Don't we have enough empty lots already? What is that doing for development in Detroit- nothing.

You might stop making stupid statements, you'll always get an argument- especially from me.
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  #213  
Old August 25th, 2009, 08:45 AM
kraig kraig is offline
 
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"So you think spending a little to secure a building that in it's better condition, years ago, would have given it a fighting chance at restoration and reuse is worse than spending millions to waste a perfectly good building for an empty lot?"

Lorax, you're argument keeps going back to would have. For whatever reason, good or bad (probably bad), the building is in the condition that it's in right now. That's the issue that the DEGC is dealing with.

If your viewpoint is going to focus on what action or inaction the City of Detroit took. You may want to contact City Council and get them to draft an ordinance that better compels the departments to secure vacant buildings that are acquired by the City. Or, present your thoughts to the Charter Commission once its put into place.
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  #214  
Old August 25th, 2009, 09:33 AM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Your snarkiness aside, I am responding to another poster's assertion that buildings should be immediately demolished upon receipt for back taxes by the City of Detroit, regardless of condition. This is an absurd position to take.

Here's a hypothetical:

The 1001 Woodward building, former 1st Federal Building- we can agree it's in very good condition now, although vacant. If the current owners default and it is foreclosed on, should the city have a demolition contract lined up for it within a few weeks? Or should it be mothballed and actively marketed for resale, even if it's sold way under market value, it gets it off the city's roll of dead buildings.

This is what the other poster was proposing for the Lafayette when it was repossessed. It was salvagable, and should have had the benefit of a good mothballing at much lower cost at the time, then spending nearly 2 million to tear it down today. A wasted asset, and wasted taxpayer dollars.

How many times do I need to reiterate this for it to sink in?

No one is arguing the current condition of the Lafayette.

Why is this such a hard separation for you to make?
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  #215  
Old August 25th, 2009, 09:45 AM
PQZ PQZ is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post

Treating it as an asset instead of a liability would have been the prudent thing to do, and it wasn't done....

Now the city is spending stimulus (our) money on demolishing it. I guess the only positive here, is that it's "stimulating" work for demolition contractors, thus providing jobs.
And there in lies the rub.The prudent thing to do is to determine if the building is a liability or an asset. The default logic that every building is an asset is not prudent and will result in all the DDAs cash preserving builidngs and never rehabbing others. Thats like asking the veterinarian to spend all his time on taxidermy and not actually keeping animals alive.

The DDA has made every good faith effort to secure a redevelopment of the building. No redevelopment is feasible now or in the foreseeable future. The DDA has determined it to be a liability. Why should the the City continue to throw good money at preserving a building that is obsolete? Think Cobo here. If you are losing $15 million a year, it is not an asset, it is a liability.

And yes DannyPalmettoCakes, you can get off your lazy duff and ask the DDA for records pertaining to the building. They would be happy to supply them...or is that too difficult for you to do from out of state? -

There are very real challenges in prosecuting neglect cases of buildings.

1. BS&ED is woefully understaffed due to massive budget cuts over the last 40 years, New buidling inspection fees pay for the inspectors to go after neglect.
No new building = no fees collected = no budget for inspectors to target neglect.

2. State and federal law protects building owners from targeted harassment. If you are going to fine Howard Schwartz for each and every broken window, you need to show you are doing the same other buildings, including low income families that can't afford to repair their windows. The instant you go after Howard, his army of lawyers will find dozens, if not hundreds, of occupied homes / units within a mile radius and have the tickets tossed. This isn't theorym this is reality. Its happened numerous times with Howard.

3. Blight Court is woefully underfunded and cannot staff up to meet its obligations.

The cold hard facts are that the city is broke. Very very broke and it simply cannot afford to do the things it should do. Its nice to sit on a forum and pronounce grandly that the City ought to do this or that when playing with imaginary money.

How should the City pay for more inspections? Cut Saturday bus service? Stop the little streetlight repair they do now? Simply give up on grass cutting?
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  #216  
Old August 25th, 2009, 10:14 AM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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I understand the city is broke, and that nothing is going to change without real leadership- ever.

This discussion has ranged from the hypothetical, the woulda, coulda, shoulda, and over and under.

We're both right in the assertion that a building needs to be assessed as an asset or a liability. The Lafayette was an asset years ago when it landed on the dead buildings list, and was salvagable. Now it's not, I agree with that. It was allowed to get to the point it is in now through negligence. Money existed at the early stages of it's vacancy to properly seal it up, now it's too damaged from water intrusion, vandalism, etc.

The Schwartz character should have been fined, liened, prosecuted, if necessary, and your assertion that you need to "evenly" hand out citations to residents as you would commercial owners is false.

If the Lafayette's cornice was in danger of killing people by falling, or windows falling out of their frames to the street below, there are laws on the books about culpability with regards to this.

Schwartz should have been hauled into court and sued. In any other city in America that would be the case. Detroit has become the wild-west with regard to the enforcement of laws on the books, and the citizens and built environment are paying the price.

BTW, the items you mentioned have already fallen by the wayside, grass cutting, streetlight repair, etc.

Regionalize what can be saved- the parks, Cobo, the library system, schools, even the police and fire departments. If the city is that broke, then it needs to cry UNCLE, and get it over with.

Last edited by Lorax; August 25th, 2009 at 10:22 AM.
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  #217  
Old August 25th, 2009, 10:16 AM
kraig kraig is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
Your snarkiness aside, I am responding to another poster's assertion that buildings should be immediately demolished upon receipt for back taxes by the City of Detroit, regardless of condition. This is an absurd position to take.

Here's a hypothetical:

The 1001 Woodward building, former 1st Federal Building- we can agree it's in very good condition now, although vacant. If the current owners default and it is foreclosed on, should the city have a demolition contract lined up for it within a few weeks? Or should it be mothballed and actively marketed for resale, even if it's sold way under market value, it gets it off the city's roll of dead buildings.

This is what the other poster was proposing for the Lafayette when it was repossessed. It was salvagable, and should have had the benefit of a good mothballing at much lower cost at the time, then spending nearly 2 million to tear it down today. A wasted asset, and wasted taxpayer dollars.

How many times do I need to reiterate this for it to sink in?

No one is arguing the current condition of the Lafayette.

Why is this such a hard separation for you to make?



"should have had"

Would have, should have. You keep saying (reiterate) the same thing just in different forms but then deny that that's what you're saying. I see where you're going, or not going, with this.
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  #218  
Old August 25th, 2009, 10:35 AM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kraig View Post
"should have had"

Would have, should have. You keep saying (reiterate) the same thing just in different forms but then deny that that's what you're saying. I see where you're going, or not going, with this.
I fail to see your point, or what you mean by this.
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  #219  
Old August 25th, 2009, 10:36 AM
bailey bailey is offline
 
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Quote:
Regionalize what can be saved- the parks, Cobo, the library system, schools, even the police and fire departments. If the city is that broke, then it needs to cry UNCLE, and get it over with.
Little difficult to do that when every effort to do so is met by the grape throwing mob of "call em out-ers", bamn-ers, and shrine of the black madonna/black nationalists screaming about the theft and pillaging of Detroit's jewels and how regionalization is the modern day equivilent of a plantation worked by slaves.
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  #220  
Old August 25th, 2009, 10:53 AM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bailey View Post
Little difficult to do that when every effort to do so is met by the grape throwing mob of "call em out-ers", bamn-ers, and shrine of the black madonna/black nationalists screaming about the theft and pillaging of Detroit's jewels and how regionalization is the modern day equivilent of a plantation worked by slaves.
LOL!!!

You're right, there are indemic problems with the factions in the city, and it's probably a dumb idea!
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  #221  
Old August 31st, 2009, 03:20 PM
staticstate staticstate is offline
 
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what's the status on the pocket park development?
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  #222  
Old August 31st, 2009, 03:43 PM
digitalvision digitalvision is offline
 
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I wanted to highlight this because as long as this is the case, we will see NO progress in enforcement of any of this. Many times, the reasons for things are a bit different than what everyone assumes.

Quote:
2. State and federal law protects building owners from targeted harassment. If you are going to fine Howard Schwartz for each and every broken window, you need to show you are doing the same other buildings, including low income families that can't afford to repair their windows. The instant you go after Howard, his army of lawyers will find dozens, if not hundreds, of occupied homes / units within a mile radius and have the tickets tossed. This isn't theorym this is reality. Its happened numerous times with Howard.
So basically, forget about any enforcement into the future if that's the case. It's not going to happen, anywhere in downtown, unless the law changes. And so, that's why the building owners do it - they know they CAN'T be gone after - the cities' hands are tied.

This is why cities like Warren do massive blight crackdowns - because if they don't do it in that manner, they could run across this same issue. Considering the city of Detroit has no money and won't be doing any such crackdowns in the forseeable future.. well it's pretty simple.

I have heard, from numerous pretty good sources (and if someone has more info, great), that another major motivator of demolition is the specter of liability. Especially since the city is self-insured, if anything happens to an urban explorer or pedestrian, that's coming straight out of the cities' pocket.

So, for instance, the Lafayette is going to cost about a million and a half to drop. It's possible to see settlements easily of that amount - or multiple times that - if ANYTHING happens to anyone. In that way, it's a much larger liability. Even mothballed, we all know that kids or whomever is going to get in somehow - it's just the way things are. People go where they're forbidden to go by habit.

If the structure of the system is that there's no penalty for leaving the building to rot, you can walk away and the city will take it, and the insurance laws make it a very large risk to keep it up, even mothballed - there's no wonder so many buildings are coming down.

I still don't like demolition - but it seems as if the structure of the city (and what it really looks like is the structure of the state) sets the cards against preservation for preservation's sake.
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  #223  
Old August 31st, 2009, 04:01 PM
cman710 cman710 is offline
 
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Political discussion aside for a moment, besides the fence being erected, has there been any action in terms of actual demolition?

Last edited by cman710; August 31st, 2009 at 05:08 PM.
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  #224  
Old August 31st, 2009, 04:41 PM
PQZ PQZ is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
The Schwartz character should have been fined, liened, prosecuted, if necessary, and your assertion that you need to "evenly" hand out citations to residents as you would commercial owners is false.
.....
Schwartz should have been hauled into court and sued. In any other city in America that would be the case. Detroit has become the wild-west with regard to the enforcement of laws on the books, and the citizens and built environment are paying the price.
Case law time and time again in Michigan has ruled that if a building owner can prove that a City is disproportionately citing and fining a particular property, the property owner can sue for harassment. The City has lost millions of dollars in the past fighting this. Its why the nuisance abatement law was established - to allow law enforcement and other agencies to go after crack houses. Unfortunately the Lafayette does not qualify as a crack house.

This is not an assertion or abstract argument. These are factual statements about the reality of what faces policy makers and leaders every day, 24 hours a day seven days a week, 365.25 days a year.

The only way to go after Schwartz for his other, current properties downtown is to go after every commercial building. To do that requires taking dozens of inspectors away from their other duties for weeks at a time to execute the sweep and then later for weeks at a time when they all wind up in blight court and then district court and the supreme court. Again, just like in numerous cases in the past.
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  #225  
Old September 1st, 2009, 07:21 PM
Russix Russix is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cman710 View Post
Political discussion aside for a moment, besides the fence being erected, has there been any action in terms of actual demolition?
The interior is being gutted. Anything that can be chopped off with hand tools and is small enough to be carried in a min-loader is being put into long dumpsters and then hauled away.
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  #226  
Old September 1st, 2009, 10:04 PM
cman710 cman710 is offline
 
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Russix, thanks for the update. I was curious to know whether things had stalled temporarily.
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  #227  
Old September 1st, 2009, 11:22 PM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Sorry, but I don't buy any of this crap about case law, and find it hard to believe that if a building's cornice is in danger of killing people, and does, then the city will still be sued for not mitigating the problem in the first place by hauling the building owner into court.

The same argument was made here in the city of North Miami, which is a separate city from Miami, with an older downtown section which until about 10 years ago had giant black olive trees lining the city's main commerical drag, 125th st.

Some idiot ran up over the curb and hit one of the trees and died, so the city was sued, successfully, with the court saying the trees should have been on the building side of the sidewalk, not between the sidewalk and the curb.

So, the city destroyed over 200 black olive trees, which were planted in the 1950's, (this was not taken into consideration or grandfathered in) and nearly completely shaded the busy street.

They were not replaced, so this one act led to a scorching hot street, where people stopped coming to walk and shop, which in turn led to most of the stores closing over time- even Starbuck's left when the street turned to shit.

All because of one stupid, misguided act by a judge who decided that if one tree was a killer, all trees are killers, and should be removed to protect the people.

The point in all of this, is why does the quality of life in an urban environment not be geared toward all people, not just the few? Why should the slumlords be protected from "harrassment" as you call it, when all they are doing is being allowed to contribute to the downfall of the quality of life in the city?

If the city can't write citations for major buildings which are dangerous, then why should any of us pull permits, pay parking fines, get certificates of occupancy, or abide by any law? If this is what Detroit has come to, then there is no future.
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  #228  
Old September 4th, 2009, 10:38 PM
buildingsofdetroit buildingsofdetroit is offline
 
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They've punched a large hole in the front of the Lafayette Building on Shelby.
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  #229  
Old September 5th, 2009, 02:11 PM
stromberg2 stromberg2 is offline
 
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Damn, it's really happening.....another missing tooth in the skyline.

Stromberg2
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  #230  
Old September 5th, 2009, 03:30 PM
cman710 cman710 is offline
 
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Any pictures? If I am able to get to the city before it is demolished, I will try to post some.
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  #231  
Old September 5th, 2009, 07:12 PM
Huggybear Huggybear is offline
 
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If your teeth make up the skyline, you're probably on your back dead.

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Originally Posted by stromberg2 View Post
Damn, it's really happening.....another missing tooth in the skyline.

Stromberg2
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  #232  
Old September 6th, 2009, 10:14 AM
digitalvision digitalvision is offline
 
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And Lorax, that's why so many have left.
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  #233  
Old September 6th, 2009, 11:01 AM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Guess that explains it, then.
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  #234  
Old September 6th, 2009, 02:40 PM
DetroitZack DetroitZack is offline
 
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These pictures are from August 26th. I will try to get some pictures when I am down there today.




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  #235  
Old September 9th, 2009, 09:02 AM
PQZ PQZ is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
Sorry, but I don't buy any of this crap about case law, and find it hard to believe that if a building's cornice is in danger of killing people, and does, then the city will still be sued for not mitigating the problem in the first place by hauling the building owner into court.
....
The point in all of this, is why does the quality of life in an urban environment not be geared toward all people, not just the few? Why should the slumlords be protected from "harrassment" as you call it, when all they are doing is being allowed to contribute to the downfall of the quality of life in the city?

If the city can't write citations for major buildings which are dangerous, then why should any of us pull permits, pay parking fines, get certificates of occupancy, or abide by any law? If this is what Detroit has come to, then there is no future.
You are completely missing the point, as usual. You and others have advocated singling out specific slumlords for being blitzed with citiations. Case law has shown repeatedly you cannot single out individuals or specific buildings for inordinate attention. Doing so constitutes harrassment and if it results in the city condemning the building, it becomes a defacto eminent domain without just compensation.

All a slumlord has to do is show they are receiving different treatment from other building owners.

So why doesn't the city just pick up a huge citation stick and go after everyone?

1. No budget for the amount of inspectors needed
2. No budget for the blight court (recall City Council defunded it and Bing had to restore the dollars) to process the violations
3. Voter backlash as struggling families are slapped with fines they can't afford on houses / dwellings they can't afford to repair
4. Slumlords dealing with the issue by evicting renters and turning to the Devil's Night Solution
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  #236  
Old September 9th, 2009, 09:07 AM
mauser mauser is offline
 
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Photos from the last couple days:

http://detroitfunk.com/?p=2234
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  #237  
Old September 9th, 2009, 09:36 AM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PQZ View Post
You are completely missing the point, as usual. You and others have advocated singling out specific slumlords for being blitzed with citiations. Case law has shown repeatedly you cannot single out individuals or specific buildings for inordinate attention. Doing so constitutes harrassment and if it results in the city condemning the building, it becomes a defacto eminent domain without just compensation.

All a slumlord has to do is show they are receiving different treatment from other building owners.

So why doesn't the city just pick up a huge citation stick and go after everyone?

1. No budget for the amount of inspectors needed
2. No budget for the blight court (recall City Council defunded it and Bing had to restore the dollars) to process the violations
3. Voter backlash as struggling families are slapped with fines they can't afford on houses / dwellings they can't afford to repair
4. Slumlords dealing with the issue by evicting renters and turning to the Devil's Night Solution
No, actually you're the one missing the point- since the beginning of this discussion.

You're advocating for not enforcing laws on the books, thinking I'm advocating for singling out slumlords on specific buildings.

I don't discriminate- hand out citations to any slumlord who allows his building to slide into the condition the Lafayette has suffered through.

If it's such a "hardship" on the slumlord to own property in the city, then maybe they shouldn't.

You need to resist dragging residential real estate into this discsssion of a commerical property.

Again, for the fifth time, there aren't too many residences in Detroit that have 10,000 lb. stone cornices in danger of falling onto pedestrians.

Keep your apples and oranges separate, please.

And I don't buy the idea that Detroit has a lack of money for inspectors, when meter maids are on top of their revenue-generating jobs, inspectors in every other American city are viewed as both public saftey officials and revenue generators.

What? Detroit has something against making money? Why don't you stop making excuses for a corrupt city that chooses to waste millions on boondoggles such as building a new Cass Tech when it wasn't necessary.

The funds are there, it's a matter of priorities.
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  #238  
Old September 9th, 2009, 10:20 AM
rjlj rjlj is offline
 
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Posts: 195
Such a waste.

I swear I saw PQZ sporting an Adamo knit cap and Adamo French blue button down long sleeve shirt the other day. Follow the Adamo money and see where it goes.

http://adamogroup.org/products/
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  #239  
Old September 9th, 2009, 11:17 AM
xD_Brklyn xD_Brklyn is offline
 
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Posts: 48
Sad to see yet another pre-war building in Detroit taken down. With the Lafayette Building gone, the coney dogs next door will no doubt taste a little different next time.
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  #240  
Old September 9th, 2009, 11:28 AM
PQZ PQZ is offline
 
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Lorax:

Perhaps you should change your name to Ostrich as you have your head firmly in the sand.

Detroit is on the verge of bankruptcy, has already enacted furloughs and is headed towards mass lay-offs, yet you are convionced the City has $400,000,000 in change hidden in the couch cushions because the privatized meter miads are doing their jobs.

Building departments nationally generate revenue through new build and renovation inspection fees. That revenue goes to offset the violation and nusiance inspection costs. If no-one is building in Detroit, then ther are no fees coming in to support the nuisance inspectors.

Simple math my friend, simple math.
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  #241  
Old September 9th, 2009, 11:54 AM
detourdetroit detourdetroit is offline
 
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...the simple math that keeps the Adamos of our sick little corner of the world doing what they do best...
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  #242  
Old September 9th, 2009, 07:26 PM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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PQZ, when have I denied that Detroit is broke? I have stated this numerous times, and that isn't finally the point- money is squandered on dozens of worthless projects, new construction, etc. If meter maids can run as efficiently as they do, so could building inspectors. It's simply not true what you say regarding new construction permitting versus citations for violations on existing buildings. One has nothing to do with the other.

Inspections are done on a regular basis for elevators, mechanicals, masonry falling, etc. Would you ride on elevators that aren't inspected? Chances are, because Detroit is broke, that even this isn't even being done- I have never said that Detroit is operating from a sane position of governance.

But the fact remains, that with all the waste in government in Detroit, there has been the money available over many years of such waste to mitigate empty buildings, and to enforce laws on the books regarding basic maintenance.

It hasn't been done, and that is why Detroit is unique among large US cities due to this corruption. At lease in corrupt city governments like Chicago, the corruption is never done at the expense of the city, as is the case in Detroit.

While you throw up your hands and give up, I, at least have identified the problem, and offered solutions to rectify them. Read my past posts to see what they are, they are too numerous to retype again.
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  #243  
Old September 9th, 2009, 07:28 PM
ljbad89 ljbad89 is online now
 
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Some pictures from yesterday:





Last edited by ljbad89; September 9th, 2009 at 07:34 PM.
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  #244  
Old September 9th, 2009, 07:35 PM
ljbad89 ljbad89 is online now
 
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Last edited by ljbad89; September 9th, 2009 at 07:39 PM.
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  #245  
Old September 9th, 2009, 07:51 PM
Haikoont Haikoont is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
While you throw up your hands and give up, I, at least have identified the problem, and offered solutions to rectify them. Read my past posts to see what they are, they are too numerous to retype again.
Awesome news. Some miscellaneous person in Florida has identified Detroit's problems and offered solutions. We should starting rising any day now.
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  #246  
Old September 10th, 2009, 10:46 AM
PQZ PQZ is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
While you throw up your hands and give up, I, at least have identified the problem, and offered solutions to rectify them. .
No you haven't. You have made grand and sweeping pronouncements and have met factual statements with "I'm not buying it".

As far as giving up, 6 1/2 years as a project lead on making the Book Cadillac a reality and having been involved with more than $500 million in other historic renovation projects around Detroit, I can safely assert that I speak from a position of knowledge about the issues facing buildings like the Lafayette. So kindly GFY.
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  #247  
Old September 10th, 2009, 01:12 PM
staticstate staticstate is offline
 
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Posts: 41
what about the building between the Lafayette building and the coneys - is that getting flattened too?
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  #248  
Old September 10th, 2009, 08:00 PM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PQZ View Post
No you haven't. You have made grand and sweeping pronouncements and have met factual statements with "I'm not buying it".

As far as giving up, 6 1/2 years as a project lead on making the Book Cadillac a reality and having been involved with more than $500 million in other historic renovation projects around Detroit, I can safely assert that I speak from a position of knowledge about the issues facing buildings like the Lafayette. So kindly GFY.
Based on your arcane, needlessly complicated posts, you have just about as much experience at this sort of thing as a doorknob- and are about as intelligent. Why should anyone buy it?

You may as well be describing yourself, since you take delight in mischaracterizing my points with erroneous "facts" as you call them, layering on nonsense so as to hide your lack of knowing what the hell you're talking about.

And as for your "position of knowledge" refer to your "GFY" to figure out what that position should be.

Last edited by Lorax; September 10th, 2009 at 08:28 PM.
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  #249  
Old September 10th, 2009, 08:03 PM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Haikoont View Post
Awesome news. Some miscellaneous person in Florida has identified Detroit's problems and offered solutions. We should starting rising any day now.
Thanks for the vote of confidence, Bandikoot.

Yeah, I'm just some anonymous person from Florida- well, I'm from Detroit as well, and still am.

I don't know about Detroit rising anytime soon, but as far as I can see, the only rising going on here is you- fueled by the hot air between your ears.
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  #250  
Old September 10th, 2009, 08:27 PM
Lorax Lorax is offline
 
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Posts: 3,097
What is so amazing about this post is the number of apologists for the City of Detroit, and it's failure to do it's part in preserving buildings on the city's dead buildings list.

What they should be doing is quickly reselling them to get them off the rolls, and failing that, mothballing them when they are still in decent condition.

Enforcing laws on the books would be a start. Hauling building owners into court for allowing buildings that present a public safety hazard, and writing citations. How difficult is this? Every city in America does it, why is Detroit the only city whose downtown is allowed to fester like this?

Enough with the excuses.

No, it's apathy on the part of the city, and a desire to get theses buildings under their control, so cronyism can take over, first the stripping, then the demolition contract kickbacks to either the DEGC or other officials who only see these buildlings as having value as it relates to their eventual demolition.

This is why Detroit looks the way it does, and until the politics change, and the city inspectors are coerced into doing their jobs, as they do in every other city in America, nothing will change.

It's so easy for the rest of you to quote chapter and verse on "how things are", well, it's not woking so well, is it? Why not direct some of your energies into changing the reasons why the system is allowed to operate in this fashion rather than telling me "how things are". I know how things are, and I know how they got that way. And I have been constructive in mentioning how things can be improved.

I, too, have had experience in dealing with large scale renovation, and have never seen so many obstacles both real and imagined set up to encumber the process.

Most of all, the negativity and fatalism is truly breathtaking.

Finally, all of this is really irrelevant until the city presents itself as a place safe enough to do business. With the number of petty crimes a constant irritant to businesses and their employees, lack of mass transportation that works, basic services neglected- until this reality of Detroit changes, nothing more will.

Last edited by Lorax; September 10th, 2009 at 08:30 PM.
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