For current info please visit detroitmi.gov
Detroit City Council’s Historic Designation Advisory Board (HDAB) has received a National Parks Service Underrepresented Communities (URC) grant to
For current info please visit detroitmi.gov
The Historic Designation Advisory Board (HDAB) serves as the coordinating agency for the City of Detroit's Certified Local Government (CLG) Program. The CLG program is a preservation partnership between local, state, and national governments focused on promoting historic preservation at the grassroots level. The program is jointly administered by the National Park Service (NPS) and the Michigan State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO).
HDAB has developed a broad, multi-year initiative to document and highlight underrepresented communities in Detroit. Part of this work is supported through grant funding.
We want to hear more about you and your family’s (parents, grandparents, friends, etc.) cultural history and how it has impacted Detroit. We will use your responses to collect Detroit histories, help us research further underrepresented communities, and identify historic places important to different cultural communities.
We are looking for community input on the following current projects that are underway:
This project will document and record the histories of Detroit’s Arab and Chaldean communities, the first of whom immigrated here over a century ago. Detroit is the first city in the nation to receive a National Parks Service Underrepresented Communities grant recognizing Arab and Chaldean history!
Through this project, HDAB will:
Connect with Arab and Chaldean community members to record local and family histories and photographs.
Identify and nominate at least (2) Detroit sites related to Arab and Chaldean community history for listing in the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).
Create a historic context report that outlines Arab and Chaldean histories in Detroit and identifies sites for potential listing in the NRHP.
HDAB’s ongoing Latinx History Project is documenting and recording Detroit’s Latinx histories, with a specific focus on Southwest Detroit. This project is supported in part by an Underrepresented Communities Grant.
Project updates:
Phase 1: A year of community consultation, historic research, and identifying important historic Latinx properties and sites. (Complete)
Phase 2: Writing a National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) nomination for portions of the Vernor and Bagley Commercial Corridors, which recognizes their importance to local Latinx histories. (In progress)
We need your help! We are looking for public feedback on the buildings within the proposed historic district. Generally, to be considered historic, it should be 50+ years old. We are looking for items from before 1980, such as:
Access the interactive map and give your feedback here!
This initiative will develop a historic context of women in Detroit as a Multiple Property Documentation Form (MPDF) and will include nominate a property to the National Register of Historic Places. HDAB will work with community partners and stakeholders to provide education and outreach opportunities regarding the history of women in Detroit. This project is being supported in part by an Underrepresented Communities Grant from the Historic Preservation Fund administered by the National Park Service, Department of the Interior.
For more information about any of the grant projects listed above, please email [email protected] or call (313) 224-3487.
Detroit City Council’s Historic Designation Advisory Board (HDAB) has received a National Parks Service Underrepresented Communities (URC) grant to
The Cass Corridor uniquely reflects Detroit's growth through its various stages of development; from the early wave of industrial leaders who constructed their showcase homes in the area, to later manufacturing centers, one of the earliest clusters of multifamily apartment buildings, waves of immigration of multiple communities, and the concentration of the city's counterculture movement in the 1960s. This project will identify and evaluate significant historic properties and districts with regard to their eligibility for the National Register of Historic Places. The historic context statement will cover the historic and architectural significance of the Cass Corridor with particular emphasis on ethnic and cultural heritage as well as Mid-Century Modern resources.
The Eight Mile/Wyoming area is the oldest Black neighborhood in northwest Detroit where approximately 1,000 African Americans settled and purchased land from 1900-1920. As a unique capsule in time from the Great Migration period in the city's development, this project will identify and evaluate significant historic properties and districts with regard to their eligibility for the National Register of Historic Places. The historic context statement will cover the historic and architectural significance of the Eight Mile/Wyoming neighborhood with particular emphasis on ethnic heritage and the civil rights movement.
The Eight Mile/Wyoming Intensive-Level Survey project was supported in part by an Underrepresented Communities grant from the Historic Preservation Fund administered by the National Park Service, Department of the Interior. Documents related to this project can be found below:
In partnership with the General Services Department (GSD), this project will prepare a specialized stabilization and mothballing plan for 26 unoccupied buildings in the Historic Fort Wayne complex to identify areas of imminent structural failure and provide detailed specifications and cost estimates for stabilization. The plan will also develop a ten-year maintenance and monitoring plan, in alignment with the ongoing Historic Fort Wayne Strategic Planning Process.
In partnership with the Model-T Automotive Heritage Complex, Inc., this project will repair the floor decking and beams in two sections of the Ford Piquette Avenue Plant, the birthplace of the Ford Model T car, in the Milwaukee Junction neighborhood. One of the most significant automotive heritage sites in the world, the plant is currently listed as a U.S. National Historic Landmark.
Eight Mile-Wyoming Intensive Level Survey Final Report