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  2. List of pedestrian zones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pedestrian_zones

    This is a list of pedestrian zones: urban streets where vehicle traffic has been restricted or eliminated for pedestrian use only. [4] These are usually pedestrianised urban centres of a city, town or district with a residential population that have been retrofitted.

  3. New Amsterdam Historic District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Amsterdam_Historic...

    The New Amsterdam Historic District was recognized by both the National Register of Historic Places and the City of Detroit [2] as a historic district in 2001. Specific buildings in the general area are included in the designation; these buildings are located at 435 and 450 Amsterdam Street, 41-47, and 440 Burroughs Street, 5911-5919 and 6050-6160 Cass Avenue, 6100-6200 Second Avenue, and 425 ...

  4. Timeline of Detroit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Detroit

    This created many more jobs for African Americans in the city of Detroit as a lot of working men went off to war. 1918 1918 influenza epidemic. WW1 ends; 1919 - Orchestra Hall opens. 1920: Detroit becomes the 4th largest city in America; 1920s: All throughout the 1920s, patterns arose of whites beginning to define black neighborhoods by race.

  5. Cass Corridor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cass_Corridor

    Little Caesars Arena, the home of the NHL's Detroit Red Wings and the NBA's Detroit Pistons, is on the west side of Woodward Avenue near Interstate 75. In the 1970s and 1980s, the Cass Corridor became a poor neighborhood known for drugs, prostitution and sex crimes against children. The area was of significance in the Oakland County Child ...

  6. Category:History of Detroit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:History_of_Detroit

    Events in Detroit (4 C, 10 P) G. ... City of Detroit III; Corner Ballpark; Cultural Center Historic District (Detroit) D. Demographic history of Detroit; Antoine ...

  7. History of Detroit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Detroit

    The Detroit News reported that more than half of Detroit property owners did not pay taxes in 2012, at a loss to the city of $131 million (equal to 12% of the city's general fund budget). The first comprehensive analysis of the city's tens of thousands of abandoned and dilapidated buildings took place in the spring of 2014.

  8. A subway system in Detroit? Here are 6 times the city tried ...

    www.aol.com/subway-system-detroit-6-times...

    Couzens told the city's newspapers that he thought Detroit was still too small for a subway, and wouldn't need one until it had at least 2 million people. (Detroit's 1920 population was just under ...

  9. Downriver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Downriver

    Downriver communities near Detroit and Dearborn (such as Allen Park, Lincoln Park, Wyandotte, River Rouge, Melvindale and Ecorse) were developed in the 1920s-1940s and are identified by brick and mortar homes (often bungalows), tree-lined streets and Works Progress Administration-designed municipal buildings, typical also of the homes within Detroit's city limits.