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Monday, December 28, 2009

Some See Farming in the Future of Detroit

Posted by on Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 10:19 AM

The one city that can become its own supply zone?

DETROIT — On the city's east side, where autoworkers once assembled cars by the millions, nature is taking back the land.

Cottonwood trees grow through the collapsed roofs of homes stripped for scrap metal. Wild grasses carpet the rusty shells of empty factories, now home to pheasants and wild turkeys.

This green veil is proof of how far this city has fallen from its industrial heyday and, to a small group of investors, a clear sign. Detroit, they say, needs to get back to what it was before Henry Ford moved to town: farmland.

"There's so much land available, and it's begging to be used," said Michael Score, president of the Hantz Farms, which is buying up abandoned sections of the city's 139-square-mile landscape and plans to transform them into a large-scale commercial farm enterprise.

"Farming is how Detroit started," Score said, "and farming is how Detroit can be saved."

That's one fantasy. Here is another:
Seattle_12.png
Seattle without humans.


How it will all end:


All of this—self-sufficient cities; cities without humans—can never be anything more than a fantasy. A part of me can not part with the realism of the urban shadow; another part of me has to side with the fiction of correlationism.

 

Comments (11) RSS

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1
Could you imagine the birds making homes out of all these buildings? Man, it's a cool thought. I wish I could live to see the day when nature pushes back into our cities. Just a vast wilderness with a few steel frames jutting up from the treeline.

Cool post.
Posted by mimosa on December 28, 2009 at 10:35 AM
lark 2
Good Morning Charles,
Yeah, I read that this morning in the NYT as well. I find it fascinating and practical considering the state of Michigan is in a state of depression vs. a recession. I read several months ago that the city of Flint, MI is indeed going to raze several abandoned homes and the original forest is to reclaim the vacant lots. The city is essentially dimishing in size (population, area etc.). Detroit and vicinity offer a glimpse of the post-industrial future in the USA. I haven't been there recently but I understand it looks like a ghostown. I genuinely believe unemployment will gets worse in the coming months. America simply isn't the manufacturing giant it was 5 decades ago. Alas, the moniker "factory of the world" now belongs to China.
Posted by lark on December 28, 2009 at 10:42 AM
Will in Seattle 3
Just because half the people in Michigan are unemployed doesn't mean everyone will desert it .... ok, they probably will, but just the young people.

Actually, I think you mean "polluter of the world", lark.
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on December 28, 2009 at 10:55 AM
4
Jesus Christ, switching from the auto industry to fucking farming? Out of the frying pan, into the high-risk, low-profit fire. I mean, why not suggest that everyone try to become professional basketball players while they're at it?
Posted by tiktok on December 28, 2009 at 11:10 AM
lark 5
@3
Yeah, that's true too. I was in Xi'an China 5 years ago and the air quality was horrible. Many people wore masks.
Posted by lark on December 28, 2009 at 11:14 AM
Lurleen 6
I grew up in Flint and had relatives in Detroit. Detroit has been like that for decades, starting with abandoned housing just outside the city core that fell into ruin and/or was razed after the 60s riots. Detroit does have many wide open fields flush with pheasant, glittering with broken glass and dotted with piles of brick and other debris. I would imagine one barrier to converting some of the feral land to farming would be that much of it is undoubtedly brownfield. Certainly the former industrial sites. However, there should be ample ground water for irrigation as necessary, provided it isn't also contaminated.
Posted by Lurleen on December 28, 2009 at 12:29 PM
Zoroastronomer 7
Chuckles is just afraid that if more people start growing their own food instead of relying on rural people to do it for them, they too shall become rural people, his greatest pseudo-intellectual fear.
Posted by Zoroastronomer on December 28, 2009 at 12:30 PM
platypusrex256 8
charles gets the best hate mail
Posted by platypusrex256 http://platypusrex256.blogspot.com on December 28, 2009 at 1:39 PM
Will in Seattle 9
that's cause we love him, platy.
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on December 28, 2009 at 1:51 PM
Telsa Grills 10
@4: Subsistence farming, not agri-business farming. Read the Harper's magazine article "Detroit Arcadia," July 2007. Google it.
Posted by Telsa Grills on December 28, 2009 at 2:13 PM
11
@4- People need food.
Posted by dwight moody on December 28, 2009 at 3:25 PM

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