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Detroit station is an intermodal transit station in Detroit, Michigan. Located in New Center , the facility currently serves Amtrak and QLine streetcars. It also serves as a stop for Greyhound Lines , Detroit Department of Transportation buses, SMART and buses.
In 1891, Detroit mayor Hazen S. Pingree broke ground on the construction of Grand Boulevard, a ring road that wrapped around the city of Detroit. [2] The Boulevard ran for 12 miles (19 km), curving from the Detroit River on the west to the river on the east and crossing Woodward Avenue at a point approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) from downtown. [2]
On February 15, 2015, M-1 Rail reported that the Penske Tech Center was under construction in New Center. The $6.9 million, 19,000-square-foot (1,800 m 2) structure serves as the M-1 Rail headquarters, the operations center, and the streetcar maintenance facility. The tech center building is sited close to Woodward Avenue, and located between ...
The first in a planned series of groundbreakings between now and 2027 happened this week for the high-profile $3 billion development in Detroit's New Center area that is a collaboration among ...
Detroit City Council could decide this week on whether to approve incentives for part of a $3 billion development in the New Center area that is a collaboration among Henry Ford Health, the ...
The capture would apply to five of the development's six projects that have $773 million in development costs. The sixth and largest project — a $2.2 billion Henry Ford Hospital expansion with a ...
Cadillac Place, formerly the General Motors Building, is a landmark high-rise office complex located at 3044 West Grand Boulevard (between Casa and Second Streets), in the New Center area alongside the Detroit River, of downtown Detroit, Michigan, in the Great Lakes region of the Midwestern United States.
The former transportation center building in 2002. Construction of the original Pontiac Transportation Center began in the late 1970s, funded by a US$3 million (equivalent to $12,600,000 in 2023) loan from the MDOT, and the new facility was opened in May 1983, serving both buses and a commuter rail service to Detroit.