By Steve Neavling
Motor City Muckraker
Since the city of Detroit announced the location of the new Red Wings arena in June 2013, at least 11 houses or buildings have been demolished within three blocks of the site.
But since the June 2013 announcement, Olympia Entertainment has yet to deliver on its pledge to redevelop the vacant property around the arena.
Here are nine buildings or houses that have been razed since May 2014:
The Temple Hotel, which served low-income residents, shut its doors in May 2014 after DTE offered more than $3 million for the property at Temple and Cass. The energy provider is building a substation on most of the block.
This trio of abandoned homes at Temple and Cass was demolished in October 2014 by a mysterious developer. The house on the left was a servant’s quarters. The middle property, a blonde brick Romanesque house, was built in the 1890s. The house on the right was converted into apartments in the 1990s. The site is now vacant.
The remains of Temple after three houses and an apartment building were demolished.
Demolished in April 2015, the red brick building at the corner of Park Avenue and Henry Street was easy to miss, inspiring the name of its last incarnation – Another Fucking Bar. Formerly known as the “2500 Club,” the bar was the city’s “most dedicated punk rock venue,” The Detroit News wrote in 2006. In 2009, the bar was sold and became “Another Fucking Bar” with a marquee that read: “Just what Detroit needs.” Beer was served from urinals, and food came in a dog bowl.
After clashing with historians, Olympia Entertainment demolished the historic Park Avenue Hotel in July 2015 to make way for a loading dock. The 91-year-old building was designed by Louis Kamper and built alongside the Eddystone Hotel in the 1920s, when the lower Cass Corridor was teeming with fancy shops. But the area declined sharply after World War II, when white, middle-class residents began moving to safer neighborhoods and the suburbs. The few upscale apartments and hotels that weren’t demolished hung on by providing services to lower-income people. The Park Avenue Hotel became a senior complex and then a rehab center for drug addicts and homeless people.
The Comet Bar at 128 Henry attracted loyal patrons who were enamored by the modest, no-frills environment and live music. The bar closed in October 2014 and was demolished.
This pair of long-abandoned houses on Cass Avenue was demolished about two months ago. Next to the houses was the Gold Dollar, a legendary bar that is now vacant.
arena , bars , Cass Corridor , demolition , ilitch , red wings , temple , vacant buildings
Steve Neavling lives and works in Detroit as an investigative journalist. His stories have uncovered corruption, led to arrests and reforms and prompted FBI investigations.
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