Changing views: Exploring pathways in the Motor City
Abstract
Pathways have informed movement and experience for a hundred years. Those pathways  implied how we live, travel and the establishment of place. New modes of transportation  shifted how people move, creating the need for organization of paths. Today, city  planners are accommodating for new and growing needs of human movement. My thesis  looks at the City of Detroit through the lens of pathways established and how to  reestablish new paths. The City of Detroit is best known for its growth during the time of  the invention and advancement of the automobile. Existing factories allowed for swift  transition to car manufacturing that would go on to shift the urban development of the  city. Today, Detroit is filled with highways, five lane wide roads, and factories that  populate every neighborhood leaving disjointed residential and commercial parcels with  voids of nothing between them. Pockets of livelihood exist in the commercial districts but  left behind voids to be someone else’s problem, its inhabitants. My thesis makes use of a  new proposed greenway throughout the city of Detroit to establish an alternative pathway  and leverage the greenways exposure through architectural intervention to fill in holes of  the Poletown.
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 Scholarly Commons @ MU
Scholarly Commons @ MU
                        
