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Just googled images Detroit blight. Is there any hope?

For the City proper it will take decades if it ever does.
There are actually some really nice suburbs though.
 
The city will eventually consolidate and come back in a more manageable size.

The Packard plant has become kind of a shrine for all that is wrong in Detroit. It's a photographers' dream. Right across the freeway from it is a modern, fully operational GM plant employing 1600 workers but it isn't as photogenic as the derelict Packard plant.

Cruising around Detroit in Goodle Earth is fasinating with blocks of desolation up against pretty decent neighborhoods.
 
this is more of what we'll see. with cheap (relatively) gas and public transportation who would choose to live in an overcrowded, polluted, crime ridden city? people will continue to move to suburbs until the commute becomes unbearable. then we might see a reversal.
 
Google Mount St Helens, the world has an amazing ability to heal itself. Detroit will recover jut fine when nature reclaims it.
 
Whoever dreamed up RoboCop may have been prophetic when they chose Detroit. I could see a private corporation being handed the reigns somehow. I seem to remember Saudi companies owning a staggering amount of America already.
 
A lot of people left over the years. That works out to empty space and empty buildings - what really did you expect?

The real low point was the late 80s. At that point, the city had gone decades with little or no new development as many waited to see when, or if, the tide would turn. No building permits were issued in 1988, a time when the city was the country’s 7th largest by population (it would later fall to 18th). Between 1978 and 1998, the city issued 9000 building permits and 108,000 demolition permits, and in 1990, the City spent twenty five million dollars on the removal of abandoned property. Those are mind boggling numbers for a major city.

Today, downtown and a few other pockets are doing better, and while the city's finances have a ways to go... it's attracting young people - the only population segment to grow 2000-2010. Parts of corktown might as well be Brooklyn. Whole foods is moving in. There's still a lot of empty space...but that means opportunities for the folks who couldn't afford a regular, dense urban environment.

For young entrepreneurs who don't mind a little urban frontierism...it's a pretty appealing place.
 
Whoever dreamed up RoboCop may have been prophetic when they chose Detroit. I could see a private corporation being handed the reigns somehow. I seem to remember Saudi companies owning a staggering amount of America already.

The city of Detroit has been going downhill for decades. Even in '87 when the movie was released.
 
Whoever dreamed up RoboCop may have been prophetic when they chose Detroit. I could see a private corporation being handed the reigns somehow. I seem to remember Saudi companies owning a staggering amount of America already.

Sell it to the Chinese?
 
I like this picture from your Google search link:

slideshow_1419087_052841_Detroits_Canvas_MICO.JPG
 
on the plus side, if Hollywood ever decided to make a Fallout movie they would just shoot the whole thing there in Detroit. No need to build a movie set for it.
Hopefully, they would drop a nuke there to make it more realistic looking before shooting it.
 
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