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Dlectricity festival will light up Detroit with art, illuminated bikes

The inaugural Dlectricity, a contemporary nighttime light art festival in Detroit that will be held Oct. 5-6, will feature a parade of illuminated bicycles in addition to 35 works of illuminated art and installations by international artists.

This new festival is led by Sky Yaeger, head designer for the Detroit-based watch, leather goods and bike company Shinola. The Light Bike Parade will be comprised of riders on Shinola bikes making a nearly four-mile loop around Midtown. Sound cool? The ride is also open to the public, so get out your cruiser and glowsticks and join the fun! The parade begins at 7 p.m. on Oct. 6.

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Detroit's North End neighborhood scheduled for small renewal project

There were many coordinating events with this year's second-annual Detroit Design Festival, but Detroit's first Better Block urban renewal project aimed to impact the North End community on a much larger and more long-term scale. 

"Started in Dallas in 2010, Better Block aims to transform vacant or poorly utilized spaces in U.S. cities into temporary indoor/outdoor community centers filled with art, bike lanes, park space, music, food and drink.

'Detroit's first venture will be at East Grand Boulevard and St. Antoine, an area of empty warehouses and art galleries. It's like a block party, organizers said, but it's also a vision of what that block could look like on a more permanent basis."

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You wanna see someone sweat? Offer them $50K and a chance to fulfill a dream

Detroit hustles harder, but these four hustle hardest: Detroit River Sports, Detroit Vegan Soul, La Feria and Rock City Pies are this year's finalists for the $50,000 Hatch Detroit start-up grant. The Detroit Hub takes a closer look at the candidates. 

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Philadelphia entrepreneur moves to Detroit to launch Quikkly from M@dison

Shawn Geller's story comes to mind when Quicken Loans Chairman Dan Gilbert talks about remaking downtown Detroit into a hub for technology start-ups that draws the best and brightest from across North America.

The CEO & co-founder of Quikkly, an Internet start-up, is originally from Philadelphia where the young man recently graduated from Temple University with a degree in finance and entrepreneurship. He pitched his idea for Quikkly to Detroit Venture Partners, the downtown Detroit-based venture capital firm, and soon after found himself moving to Detroit to chase his entrepreneurial hopes and dreams.

"I decided to go out on a limb and move out here," Geller says. "I left everything behind. My fiancee was living in Philadelphia until I got her to move here two weeks ago."

Quikkly is now a Detroit Venture Partners portfolio company and is based out of the M@dison Building. It is developing software that helps big brands harness their customers' motivations. Geller saw people standing in lines in front of stores for hours during big shopping days like Black Friday to score the best deals. He wants to offer a way for those same shoppers to take advantage of those same deals but only doing it online.

"We start (the product) out at a very low price for the first movers and the price goes up the longer the sale goes on," Geller says. "Us being able to offer it at a lower price point helps us feed the frenzy for these products."

Quikkly is at the tail end of developing its software and has already begun offering some deals online to the general public about one every week or two. The 9-month-old firm expects to do a large launch within the next three months.

Source: Shawn Geller, co-founder of Quikkly
Writer: Jon Zemke

Read more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

Whole Foods looks for muralists for artwork at new Detroit store

Whole Foods is putting out a call for artists to create four murals at its new Detroit store in Midtown.

The high-end grocer plans to put up four murals on the exterior of the building on Mack Avenue between Woodward Avenue and John R Street. The murals would be facing John R and will measure 23 feet wide and 14 feet tall. The murals will be attached to the building and Whole Foods is looking for just about any and all ideas.

"That (what kind of murals) is really open at this point," says Amanda Musilli, community liason for Whole Foods' Detroit store. "It can be a mixed-media piece if that is what somebody does. We probably won't do a steel sculpture because of weight restrictions."

Whole Foods is willing to pay for $1,000 in material costs and $7,500 for each of the four murals. Individual artists could win one or multiple or all four commissions for the murals. The funding for the murals is being provided by Midtown Detroit Inc. For information on the mural project, send an email to [email protected]. The deadline for submissions is Oct. 15.

Whole Foods is building a grocery store on the north side of Mack, just east of Woodward. Construction is underway and work is largely finished on the structure's parking lot. The store is set to open in late May or early June of next year.

Source: Amanda Musilli, community liason for Whole Foods
Writer: Jon Zemke

Read more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

Boutique Hotel Made of Shipping Containers Planned for 2013

A boutique hotel made of shipping containers? Oh, why not. Collision Works (formerly the Detroit Hotel Project) will offer 24-36 hotel rooms and event space in an undeniably creative construct ... made of salvaged shipping containers.

"Shipping containers are considerably more durable than standard construction, can cost less, and most importantly are about 30% faster to build," founder Shel Kimen writes on the Collison Works blog (as reported by Curbed Detroit). Shipping-containers-as-building-materials have only come into vogue in the past decade, and this sort of post-industrial repurposing and sustainability certainly seems to have a natural home in Detroit. With Detroit tourism on the rise, will this odd architectural strategy prove to be a draw in itself? Well, one thing is certain: hardcore Dexter fans won't be able to resist this.

Read the full story on Curbed

Detroit Is A Hotbed of the World's Best Graffiti Artists

Unless you've been living in the mountains of Tibet all year (which, if you were ... cool), you've heard about all of the many, many, manymanymanymany mural projects going on around the city. From the Detroit Beautification Project to the Grand River Creative Corridor and every inch of empty wall in-between, Detroit is getting muralized. UIX partner Curbed Detroit put together this handy guide to recent works, but take note: the whole nature of street art is transience, and these are subject to change quickly.

Greening of Detroit expands beyond urban forestry

The Detroit Free Press's John Gallagher does a little Q&A with one of our favorite innovators, Rebecca Salminen Witt of Greening of Detroit. 

Read it here

GOOD Maker Challenge: Win $2,500 for a Creative Community-Building Project

GOOD Maker is offering a $2,500 grant for your community project. Get all the details here

Comerica Hatch Detroit Contest 2012 Semifinalists

Hatch is back! The biggest election of the year ... well, okay, second biggest ... is back for its second year offering a $50,000 small business grant to the winner and grand champeen of whatever small business pitch raises up the most votes. Will it be a second outlet for a retail store that already exists in Chicago or a second outlet for a restaurant that already exists in Clawson? Maybe a seasonally-geared business like an outdoor beer garden or Detroit River kayak rentals? Will a former Project Runway contestant take home the prize, or will it instead go to an all-American emigree? Vegan soul food? Craft beer store? THE SUSPENSE IS KILLING US.

Read all about the contest and the semifinalists on HuffPo Detroit.

Detroit Revitalization Fellow: Brian Connors

Brian Connors exhibits every sign of a being dedicated, fervent, inexhaustible entrepreneur.  

He thinks in expansive terms, constantly rolling out new ideas as he talks. Connors has already launched two ventures in the rough-and-tumble business climate of Beijing--a private language school, and an American-style 24-hour diner in the city’s University District that he still co-owns. In China, he also helped a local real estate firm develop a major hotel and shopping district, founded a neighborhood improvement association and managed three retail spaces.  

So why did he move from the capital of the world’s most booming economy to a city struggling to reverse years of decline? For Connors, who grew up in Grand Rapids, the answer is simple. "If you are the kind of person who wants to do new things, there’s probably no better place to be."

Indeed, Detroit today reminds him of Beijing when he arrived in 2003. "Both are gritty places where a lot of change is possible. Detroit is ripe for entrepreneurship," he says. Rents are low, people’s desire for change is high and everyone is willing try something new to see what happens. 

His business partners and friends back in China were not surprised to see him go. "I’d been talking for years about years for going back. I was just sitting there watching China rise as Michigan lost jobs. Michigan is close to my heart."

Like many of the most determined entrepreneurs, making money is less important for Connors than making a difference.  Actually, in college he studied Chinese (B.A. at Williams College) and Public Policy (M.A. at Harvard), not economics or business. "As an entrepreneur you do more than serve your customers, you’re also serving your neighborhood and the wider community."

He launched his language academy, Speakeasy English, to connect young Chinese with the flood of North Americans moving to Beijing. "We created a lot of cultural exchange," he says, "so were a subject of scrutiny by the authorities. They want you to avoid the three Ts: Tibet, Taiwan and Tiananmen." The Bridge Café grew out of the language school and features classrooms where classes and clubs can meet. 

Connors moved to Detroit in 2010, a city he had never lived in before, with no certain plans. He found work as a freelance translator as he got used to the culture shock of being back in the U.S. "In Beijing, about 80 percent of the conversation in a café is about starting businesses. They are obsessed about finance and getting ahead personally. Here, most of the conversation is about baseball and football."

A new path suddenly appeared to him one day when three different people forwarded Connors an email announcing the Detroit Revitalization Fellowship program, each with a message to the effect, "This is you!"

The Fellows program is a Wayne State University project (funded by the Kresge FoundationFord FoundationHudson-Webber FoundationSkillman Foundation and Wayne State University that matches rising professionals with organizations working at the forefront of Detroit revitalization efforts. Connors applied and last year went to work for Southwest Housing Solutions, a nonprofit developer that manages 600 affordable apartments and 120,000 square foot of commercial spaces in the city’s Southwest neighborhoods. 

"I am very, very pleased," says his supervisor Dan Pederson, director of business development. "Brian’s out there a lot talking to people. He brings a calm, analytical approach, which is important in a job where you may face critical situations loaded with emotional feelings."

Pederson praises the Fellows program. "We’re a few months into it, and already it’s proven a huge help. When you have a multi-dimensional challenge like we have in Detroit, you need this young talent with their creativity and energy. These Fellows network all over the city, bringing about a level of cooperation we hadn’t seen before. This is a fantastic thing that’s happening."

Connors has recently taken a new position at the Michigan Economic Development Corporation that directly applies his Chinese experience to his mission of helping boost the economic prospects of his home state. "I'm working to develop a China strategy for Michigan and attract Chinese investment to create jobs in Michigan," he says, adding that he’ll still be a Detroit Revitalization Fellow.  

Jay Walljasper, author of The Great Neighborhood Book and All That We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons, is a Senior Associate with Citiscope and Senior Fellow with Project for Public Spaces.

Local transit visionary shares wish list in HuffPo

Late last year, Neil Greenberg wrote this nifty piece for Model D on how he envisions rapid transit in this city and region. Now another gem, this time in HuffPost Detroit.

An excerpt:

Great transit won't happen because a cadre of powerful people say so. While high-profile support is essential, making transit work is ultimately an act of the people. Commuters. Taxpayers. Hoi polloi who couldn't hope to access smoke-filled rooms where high-stakes conversations about transit are currently taking place.

Read more here.

DPS, city, archdiocese partner to find creative reuses for old schools

Detroit Public Schools wants you to redevelop one of its historic schools into neighborhood mainstays that will serve as community assets for the next century.

The school district recently held a redevelopment conference at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Boston Edison promoting the redevelopment of the dozens of closed schools across the Motor City it wants to see redeveloped. The underlying theme of the conference centered around words like flexibility, solutions and thinking outside the box.

"We hope the next class of buyers are in this room today," Roy Roberts, emergency manager of Detroit Public Schools, said at the event.

The school district has already sold 25 of its buildings, creating almost $11 million in new revenue. Some of those success stories include the Burton School on Cass Avenue in Midtown which became creative space for entrepreneurs among other uses. Old Redford High School is also in the process of being redeveloped into a new Meijer superstore.

Detroit Public Schools currently has 85 properties (both old schools and vacant land) that are available for redevelopment. Those properties represent 863 acres of land and 45 million square feet of space. There are four large parcels that are each larger than five acres. The Archdiocese of Detroit also took the opportunity to promote the redevelopment of the closed schools and churches it is trying to sell in Detroit.

City of Detroit officials are working closely with both the school district and archdiocese to find viable futures for these buildings. The city is open to a number of uses as long as they compliment the surrounding community (no industrial parks in the middle of a neighborhood) and is ready to be flexible to find a solution.

"We are so flexible and open at this time." Karla Henderson, planning and facilities group executive for the city of Detroit, said at the event. "We want to think outside the box."

For information on the properties available at Detroit Public Schools, click here, and for information on properties available at the Archdiocese of Detroit, click here.

Source: Roy Roberts, emergency manager of Detroit Public Schools and arla Henderson, planning and facilities group executive for the city of Detroit
Writer: Jon Zemke

Read more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

MEDC's Pure Michigan Business Connect gets behind KivaDetroit

A Detroit-based crowd-funding initiative has become the newest umbrella program of the state of Michigan's Pure Michigan Business Connect.

Kiva Detroit is the Detroit-branch and first U.S. branch of Kiva.org. The San Francisco-based micro-lending website specializes in helping fledgling entrepreneurs in developing countries raise small amounts of capital to start or grow their businesses. Kiva Detroit was launched a year ago with the idea of kicking off the same concept in the U.S.

"This provides a nice opportunity to focus their (local investors) efforts locally and help these entrepreneurs that want to take that next step and invest in themselves," says Greg West, community lending manager for the Michigan Economic Development Corp.

He adds that there is still an gap between institutional investors, such as banks, and young entrepreneurs with fresh ideas in economically challenged places like Detroit. Kiva Detroit has the potential to help close that gap.

The new state-led support for Kiva Detroit is part of four other programs that were brought under the Pure Michigan Business Connect umbrella this spring. Pure Michigan Business Connect is a state-led effort to connect local businesses with investment and revenue sources. So far it has leveraged more than $8 billion, helping companies find new ways to raise capital, get access to various business services, and connect with each other with business-to-business procurement opportunities.

Source: Greg West, community lending manager for the Michigan Economic Development Corp
Writer: Jon Zemke

Read more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

Community rebuilds Scripps Park at historic Woodbridge corner

We know this story but love it when people tell it again and again, as does Donna Terek in the Detroit News. An excerpt: 

A group called Forward Arts Detroit -- headed by Dominic Arellano and Lou Castanelli's Access Arts -- teamed with the Woodbridge Neighborhood Development Corporation and Friends of Scripps Park last summer to clean up, and call attention to, this shaded and walled oasis of calm at one of Detroit's most bustling crossroads.

Read it all here.

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