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Thursday
Sep152011

Detroit Moxie's Weekend Roundup

The Detroit Tigers are on a dramatic roll with a 12 game winning streak, bringing the magic number (to clinch the division) down to 2. The Detroit Lions won their season opener. That hasn’t happened since 2007 so we have a lot of hope going into the home opener at Ford Field this Sunday.

Good luck to all our Detroit sports teams! Have a great weekend.

Weekend Roundup

1. DIY Street Fair - This is one of my favorite fests of the year. An outdoor marketplace with over 100 crafty vendors, 35 Michigan craft beer selections, live music and food! September 16—18.

2. Funky Ferndale Art Fair - Billed as "twice as funky as the average fine art show," it promises a bit more edge and over 120 artists. September 16—18.

3. PARK(ing) Day Detroit (Facebook link) - This is a worldwide event that transforms boring, metered parking spaces into temporary parks. September 16th.

4. Northville Victorian Festival - Step back in time and take part in the beautiful Victorian era complete with costumes, storytellers and entertainment. September 16—18.

5. Michigan Renaissance Faire - If the Victorian era isn't your thing, how about midievil times? Enjoy jousting, meat on a stick and entertainment. Weekends through October 2nd.

Bonus: Campus Martius Wedding Reception Festival – Jeanette Pierce, Detroit’s biggest ambassador and one of the founders of Inside Detroit, is getting married this weekend. First off, congrats Jeanette and Richard—we wish you all the best! Being Jeanette, she decided that her reception would celebrate the city she loves and have an open festival at Campus Martius. Music featuring Thornetta Davis and The Sights. Cash bar.

Do you know of a great event going on in Metro Detroit this weekend? Add it to the comments and share it with us!

Tuesday
Sep132011

Detroit Stories

Detroit has many stories. We are known as the “Paris of the Midwest,” the Motor City and Hockeytown. Today we are also known for our burnt out buildings and ruin porn. We gave the world Motown and the automobile. The people of Detroit are strong and resilient.

Over the past few years outsiders have been chomping at the bit to tell our stories, seen through their eyes and conveyed with whatever spin that would get them ratings. Our reactions were of confusion and anger.

A few weeks ago I hinted that you might be reading a few new voices here on Detroit Moxie. Those new voices will be in the form of guest posts by people telling their story of Detroit. Some are just moving here, some are returning home, some have just left the state and some have been living in Detroit for a year.

They are all Detroiters in transition and they will be telling their Detroit story.

I’ve only reached out to a few people as of now. The first batch of stories that you’ll see are from ardent supporters or fans of Detroit Moxie. I met most of these people through this blog. They might have commented on a post or sent me an email and I followed up. I’ve met all of them in person and now consider them friends, not fans.

I’m not sure exactly where the series will go—I kind of want to see what happens organically. But I do have some thoughts on the road it might end up taking.

The first post in this series was actually published a few weeks ago. Josh Sidorowicz wrote about his summer internship in Detroit. Go read it if you haven’t done so already. The next post in the series will run this Friday.

I hope you enjoy these Detroit Stories by your fellow readers. 

Saturday
Sep102011

I have a little girl watching over me

Brunch with Becks is an ongoing weekend series where I wax poetic on tales from my life starting with the 9 Truths. Yes, I too can’t comprehend that all these odd occurrences have happened to me.

I promise I'll get back to the 9 Truths soon. I wrote this post back in May on my iPhone.


I have a little girl watching over me.

She is me. I am her.

She makes me stronger. She screams, "don't tell me what I can't do!" She wonders what happened to my childlike wonder. She asks me about my dreams and can't comprehend my difficulties.

She is me. I am her.

For many years I kept a picture of her close by. She sat on my bedside table, watching me as I slept. She was the first thing I saw in the morning. That little girl is porcelain perfect.

She is me.

My three-year-old self was amazing. She could do anything. For a while she wanted to be an Olympic swimmer. Then she had thoughts of being a psychiatrist just like the fictional Marlena Evans.

Her family told her to write.

Dreams.

That little girl in the plaid dress—holding a lamb—with a locket around her neck—made me stronger. She reminded me not to settle but to dream. To know anything was possible.

She was my reminder to be who I needed to be—who I wanted to be. Every morning I would look at that little girl and knew I had to do more. Be better. That little girl wanted the world, how could I deny her?

So, every day I try and live up to her dreams.

What can I tell you about her?

She was devoted to her parents—they are still her heroes—and her family. True friendship means the world to her but her heart has been blackened by betrayal. Now it takes longer to really know her. She longed to find true love. She found it!

But she's still trying to find out why she's here.

She loves Detroit.

I've kept her in the frame for all these years because she is pretty and polished and cute. All the things that I'm not anymore.

With age, come wrinkles and moles and brown spots. Spots of disappointment and heartache. Bad decisions and good decisions.

But when you're 3 or 4? It's sun-kissed skin, yellow polka dot bikinis, a hand to hold and a puppy to love. And even the biggest dreams seem possible.

I am her. She is me.

After two years of her not being on my bedside table, I need to find her again. She can do anything. She is amazing.

She is me. But am I still her?

Thursday
Sep082011

Detroit Moxie's Weekend Roundup

Labor day weekend has passed, the kids are back to school and fall weather is in the air. It’s (almost) autumn in Detroit. To me that means football games, cider mills and the leaves changing colors. Oh, and sweatshirt weather—I love my hoodies.

 

We have plenty of beautiful days ahead of us—make sure to enjoy every minute.

Weekend Roundup

1. Dally in the Alley - The annual eclectic festival celebrates life in the Cass Corridor. Beer, music and art—what more can you ask for? September 10th.

2. Arts & Apples Festival - Bring on the fall weather! Fine art, live entertainment, kids zones, plenty of food and apples. September 9—11th.

3. Burton Theater presents Cinema BBQ VI - Two "trashy" movies—Rock 'n Roll High School and Pink Flamingos, outside on a big screen. Food from Porktown Sausage and jams fro DJ Marianna V. September 10th.

4. Plymouth Fall Festival - What started in 1956 as a family picnic sponsored by the Rotary Club has now blossomed into a large festival featuring entertainment, a craft show, a car show, spaghetti dinner, pancake breakfast, bingo and more. September 9—11th.

5. Chill at the Joe - Hockey season is right around the corner! Spend time at Joe Louis Arena with your family, skating on the ice, touring the Detroit Red Wings locker room and watch an alumni game all to benefit First Step. September 11th.

6. Battle of the Brits - This British motorcycle and car show features over 200 vintage bikes and over 400 cars. Set on the beautiful campus of Orchard Lake St. Mary's, the gearhead event also has activites for kids and a chili cookoff. September 11th.

Bonus: Detroit Brunch Downtown at Cliff Bells.

Do you know of a great event going on in Metro Detroit this weekend? Add it to the comments and share it with us!

Tuesday
Sep062011

Frank Lloyd Wright's presence in metro Detroit

Commonly known as America’s most famous architect, Frank Lloyd Wright designed many buildings in Michigan. His homes are found all around our state but there are three known Frank Lloyd Wright homes in metro Detroit.

All three homes are of Usonian design. The Usonian home was Wright’s answer to affordable housing for the middle class. The homes were to be built for $5000 but they usually exceeded that goal.

Usonian homes were smaller, single story dwellings usually built with an “L” shape. The living room was the largest room of the house and the bedrooms were quite small. They didn’t have attics or basements and the roof was flat.

The Dorothy Turkel House is the only known house designed by the famed architect in the city limits of Detroit. It is also the one that receives the most attention as it was recently purchased and painstakingly renovated. In my opinion, it is also the most beautiful.

I had the pleasure of meeting Norman Silk, one of the current owners of the Turkel House, a few months ago at the home of Kim Tandy at a Transformation Detroit event put on by the Detroit Regional News Hub.

We talked about his home, what it was like to live in a Frank Lloyd Wright abode and all the attention it was receiving. Silk told me that they were currently installing a fence that should help with their privacy.

So, I was quite pleased when I drove by recently to see a wrought iron fence surrounding the property—it allows the beauty of the home to still be viewed from Seven Mile Road.

The Turkel House is a Usonian Automatic, which were made with concrete blocks. Think about them like Legos—they could be assembled in a variety of ways to make the homes unique. The 4,000 square-foot Turkel House is the only two-story Usonian that Wright designed.

I knew of two other Wright homes in Bloomfield Hills and Silk and I began talking about those. He told me that one of them was on Ponvalley Road. How did I not know this? Ponvalley is very close to my home and where I grew up. I’m pretty sure that I used that street as a shortcut while in high school.

The Melvyn Maxwell Smith House is the house located on Ponvalley—it’s just west of Lahser Road and just south of Lone Pine Road. Much smaller than the Turkel House, it sits beautifully in its wooded surroundings and sculptures are placed throughout the grounds.

The story of Melvyn and Sara Smith is quite touching. They weren’t well off—I believe they were teachers—and would drive up Woodward Avenue from Detroit to work on their dream home. The home was nearly finished, they only needed windows, when the Smiths ran out of money.

A local businessman heard of their problems and paid to have the windows measured and installed for $500. The local businessman was Alfred Taubman.

Silk then vaguely told me where the third Wright home was located—north of Long Lake Road on Woodward. He said it was nestled in behind the big bank. This one was more difficult to find but with the help of my mom—a retired U.S.P.S. worker who used to deliver mail in this area—and online maps, I found it.

When you pull onto the street you immediately see the Gregor Affleck House. Wright asked his clients to find property where no one else could build and I’m sure that in 1940 no one imagined the sprawl that has crept in the area. The other homes are almost sitting upon the Affleck house and I feel sorry for the close proximity of its neighbors.

Affleck was a boyhood friend of Wright and after graduating from college asked him to design a home for him. Mr. and Mrs. Affleck lived in the house until their death. Their children donated the house to Lawrence Technological University. Check the LTU site for more information about the Affleck House. They do state that tours are available by appointment.

The Turkel, Smith and Affleck houses are all conveniently located along the Woodward Corridor. There are also a few Frank Lloyd Wright homes in Plymouth, MI and some talk of part of the interior of Wetmore’s Auto Service Station in Ferndale having been designed by Wright. I haven’t been able to research those yet.

Detroit is often hailed for its amazing architecture—there is a reason for the moniker the “Paris of the Midwest.” But it’s not just large buildings and skyscrapers—there is wonder and beauty in the smallest of our structures.

The Smith House: 5045 Ponvalley Road, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.

The Affleck house: 1925 Woodward Avenue, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. (Note: that is the official address. The house is located on Bloomfield Woods, just north of Long Lake Road off the west side of Woodward Avenue.)

The Turkel House is on the north side of Seven Mile, west of Woodward Avenue. (Please be mindful that this is someone's home. Have respect.)