On this episode of Daily Detroit, we learn what is actually happening behind the scenes in Midtown and New Center, and why 2026 is shaping up to be a pivotal year.
I sat down with Midtown Detroit Inc executive director Melanie Markowicz to talk about the new future of Detroit’s old Chinatown, how a neighborhood nonprofit now maintains an area larger than Hamtramck, and what a $3 billion “Future of Health” investment could mean for residents.
We start at Cass and Peterboro, in the historic Chinatown district.
Midtown Detroit Inc just unveiled final design concepts for the Peterboro streetscape, backed by a one million dollar state grant that came after the demolition of a former Chinese Merchants Association building galvanized the community.
The goal is not to build a fake new Chinatown, but to fix failing infrastructure, support small businesses, and honor the Chinese American history that is still visible on the block.
From there we zoom out. Midtown Detroit Inc has quietly shifted away from being a bricks and mortar developer into a public space and stewardship machine.
The organization now maintains ten public parks, all the medians on Woodward and West Grand within its footprint, six green alleys, the Midtown Greenway Loop, and more than 40 miles of streetscape across nine neighborhoods from Brush Park up through New Center and parts of Milwaukee Junction and Virginia Park.
That is work many assume the city government pays for; but it's actually supported by the nonprofit. That frees up dollars for the city to spend elsewhere.
We also get into the coming wave of investment around Henry Ford Health and the Pistons Performance Center, and how to make sure all that money translates into trees, sidewalks, art, and everyday gathering spaces where current neighbors still feel at home.
Main topics we covered
- Final designs for the Peterboro streetscape in historic Chinatown and the backstory of how a demolition sparked a million dollar grant and a larger vision
- How Midtown Detroit Inc moved from being a building developer to a public space and streetscape steward
- What it actually means to maintain ten parks, multiple medians, green alleys, and 40 plus miles of streetscape across nine neighborhoods
- The three billion dollar Future of Health project in New Center and another billion in nearby development now in the pipeline
- Why rebranding, events like Dally in the Alley and Noel Night, and park reactivations like New Center Park matter for neighborhood identity and avoiding displacement