• Welcome
  • Community
  • Blogs
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Join
  • Log in
Follow MNN    
MNN - Mother Nature Network - Envrionmental News
improve your world

 

Sunday, May 27, 2012
  • Earth Matters

    Browse All » Animals Weather Energy Politics Space Translating Uncle Sam Wilderness & Resources

  • Health

    Browse All » Allergies Fitness & Well-Being Healthy Spaces

  • Lifestyle

    Browse All » Arts & Culture Travel Natural Beauty & Fashion Recycling Responsible Living

  • GREEN TECH

    Browse All » Computers Gadgets & Electronics Research & Innovations Transportation

  • Eco-Biz & Money

    Browse All » Green Workplace Personal Finance Sustainable Business Practices

  • Food & Drink

    Browse All » Beverages Healthy Eating Recipes

  • Your Home

    Browse All » At Home Organic Farming & Gardening Remodeling & Design

  • family

    Browse All » Babies & Pregnancy Family Activities Pets Protection & Safety

Tweet
Pin It
Email Bookmark and ShareShare
WorldShares lets you earn donations for your favorite nonprofit. Earn up to 20 points now.
Learn More

Earn Points
What's this?
MNN.COM›

MNN BLOGGERS

Matt Hickman

Detroit asks: 'Won't you be my neighbor?'

The city of Detroit is offering energy-efficient gut renovations, forgivable loans and other incentives to homeowners willing to move into abandoned homes in down-and-out neighborhoods.

Thu, Feb 17 2011 at 11:35 AM EST

An abandoned house in Detroit. Photo: Jessicareeder/Flickr
Did the 10,000-square-foot cursed crack house — or crack mansion, rather — on sale in Los Angeles for $15.2 million and featured earlier this week not do it for you adventurous home renovators? It’s understandable. All of the zero-VOC paint, energy-efficient windows and rooftop photovoltaics in the world couldn’t rid that place of the bad mojo surrounding it. Well, maybe it could — but I certainly wouldn’t want to move in.
 
A world away in Detroit, there are plenty of abandoned fixer-uppers ripe for the taking. And if you’re lucky, these homes haven’t been the scene of satanic rituals, gang initiations or drug-fueled squatting. One thing is for sure: the abandoned, in need-of-TLC homes of Detroit don’t cost $15.2 million. In fact, the city of Detroit will pay you to move in.
 
According to the Business Insider, Mayor David Bing is offering incentives to folks who are willing to move and give the city's plentiful abandoned housing stock some love. One program detailed by the Detroit Free Press is focused on getting at least 200 Detroit police officers who are living in the suburbs back into city by offering homes for as little as $1,000.
 
Bing plans to spend $150,000 in energy-efficient renovations on each of the 200 abandoned homes that are primarily in the historic East English Village and Boston-Edison neighborhoods. Officers willing to move into the homes will also be offered up to a $25,000 down payment and forgivable loans. The funding for all of this is coming from $30 million in federal stimulus money.
 
The Business Insider notes that another program, this one for college graduates, is offering up to $2,500 for renters and $20,000 in forgivable loans for those interested in buying an abandoned house in Motor City.
 
Although the city seems to be covering the renovation costs in these cases, This Old House named The Villages, a network of six historic neighborhoods near downtown Detroit, the best area in the country for DIYers to find an affordable fixer-upper. Other cities on This Old House’s “Best Old House Neighborhoods” list from 2010 include Junius Heights in Dallas, North Mayfair in Chicago, West Adams in L.A., Stuyvesant Heights in Brooklyn, and the Old Town Historic District in Brunswick, Ga. 
 
Via [Business Insider], [Detroit Free Press]
 
MNN homepage photo: Bob Jagendorf/Flickr
Previous Post
Grandparents gone wild: BOOM to break ground in 2012
   Next Post
Architect creates woodsy vacation cottage ... in industrial Brooklyn
You might also like:
Related Topics: City & Urban, Economy, Financial Crisis, Renovation

Comments

Follow this conversation
Add your comment
View:
  • All (1)

anonymous
Brick 02/18/2011 11:40 AM

All the incentives in the world won't get people to move here if we can't curb the crime. Having a bunch of police for neighbors is a pretty good start. Hope it works. Then maybe we get more people to support the urban farming initiatives.

  • |
  • Reply
  • report this post 

Add your comment

Sign in with one of these accounts or just add your comment below.
    Log in or
    create an account
     
    •  
Used only for emailed comments and will not be displayed with your post
Notify me with an email when other people comment on this article.
The posting of advertisement, profanity or personal attacks is prohibited.
Click here to review our Terms of Use

EDITORS' PICKS

tease to asteroids

tease to pet facials

tease to emotional eating

ADVERTISEMENT

NEWSLETTER

Mother Nature. Delivered

CONNECT WITH MNN

Follow @twitterapi
 Tumblr
 Google +

About Matt Hickman

Eco-living expert blogs about best ways to go green at home.

RSS feedMore about Matt

Recent Posts

  • Playing Catch up: 'Til Tuesday
  • Composting that cuppa: PG Tips launches tea bag recycling initiative
  • No, you're not hallucinating: Designer unveils wooden light bulb
+ Add this to my site

Matt's BLOGROLL

Design BoomDwell
GOODCo.Design
Jetson GreenCurbed National
Core77TreeHugger
NY Times Home & GardenL.A. at Home

ADVERTISEMENT



Quick Links

  • About Us
  • Advisory Board
  • Editors' Blog
  • Press
  • Privacy
  • Sitemap
  • Terms of Service
  • WorldShares

MNN Tools

  • Advice
  • Blogs
  • Day in History
  • Eco-glossary
  • Infographics
  • Lists
  • Photos
  • Videos

Connect

  • Community
  • Contact Us
  • Contests
  • Idea Lab
  • Mixed Greens
  • Newsletters
  • Polls
  • RSS

Channels

  • Earth Matters
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Green Tech
  • Eco-Biz & Money
  • Your Home
  • Family
  • State Reports

Follow MNN

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Google+
  • StumbleUpon
 

Copyright © 2012 MNN Holdings, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Website by GLICK INTERACTIVE | Powered by CIRRACORE
 
SPONSORS