On today’s Daily Detroit, I’m joined by the Prince of Brightmoor himself, Norris Howard, for a conversation about what kind of city and community we actually want to build.
We start with the University of Michigan men’s basketball national championship, how a starting five of transfers signals a new era in college hoops, and why I’m choosing some hope for the Detroit Pistons.
From there, we dive into the recent “teen takeover” downtown and what really happened versus the panic you might have seen on social media.
Norris talks about growing up in the city, why big groups of kids have always gathered somewhere when the weather turns nice, and how race, class, and whose property we value shape which crowds we call a “problem.”
We also kick around what it would mean to actually welcome young people downtown with spaces and programming designed for them.
Then we pivot to a new Rocket Mortgage survey on the “neighborhood paradox” — most of us say community matters, but only a fraction really know our neighbors.
Norris makes the case that HOAs are “the death of the neighborhood,” and we swap stories about block‑level care, watching each other’s kids, and why I chose to live in a part of Detroit where people still show up for one another.
We close with Detroit’s surge in office‑to‑residential conversions, from the RenCen and Penobscot to the Guardian, Fisher, and beyond, and imagine a dream list of buildings that should be filled with new Detroiters instead of empty floors.
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