Hello everyone! This post idea is one that just sorta happened due to a chance encounter I had this past weekend. I thought that pretty much everyone that is from the metro Detroit area, if not the entire state of Michigan, knew about the Heidelberg Project. It was not until a very late night group conversation with beautiful new souls I met did I realize that not everyone knew about the Heidelberg Project. So basically this post is one that I am posting just because I want everyone to know the story behind it and experience it for themselves. Sorry if you are familiar with the story already but check back soon for another adventure post! Also the pictures I am about to share with you are a couple years old when some of the destroyed houses were still standing so that’s pretty cool. I was just thinking how long it has been since I’ve been there. Probably haven’t been since I took these because I didn’t want to see the destruction that has happened. Anyways, I encourage you to do some research yourself so you can see the old days!!
The Heidelberg Project is an art project in Detroit that was created in 1986 by artist Tyree Guyton and his grandfather Sam Mackey. It was meant to be an outdoor art space in the McDougall-Hunt neighborhood, which was by the city’s historically African-American Black Bottom area. The Heidelberg Project is meant as a political protest of Tyree Guyton’s childhood neighborhood beginning to deteriorate after the 1967 riots (which I told you to look up in the last post so I hope you did!). Guyton came back to the area after being in the army and described the area as “looking like a bomb went off.”
In the beginning, the project consisted of him painting the houses on the Heidelberg Street with crazy colors and dots while also attaching objects to the house. This began to help the entire neighborhood turn from somewhere that people don’t walk the streets, to somewhere people took pride in their homes and wanted to be outside. Guyton worked on the project daily with the local children. He and director Jenenne Whitfield gave lectures about the project around the world. They wanted to develop the project into the city’s first indoor and outdoor museum, including a community garden and amphitheater etc. In 2005 the Heidelberg Project was awarded the Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence silver medal.
However, like all nice things in Detroit, they don’t tend to last and the project fell to the same fate. It started with two mayors who thought the project was an eyesore and ordered demolition. In November 1991, under Mayor Coleman Young, the Heidelberg Project’s “The Baby Doll House,” “Fun House” and “Truck Stop” were completely demolished. Under Mayor Dennis Archer, a second demolition of the Heidelberg Project was ordered on February 4, 1999 that ended in the destruction of the houses Guyton termed “Your World,” “Happy Feet” and “The Canfield House.” Fuck those men honestly. Who would order for art to be destroyed ever? But that actually leads into another problem with Detroit. And that would be arson. There were two destructive years of arson in Detroit in regards to the Heidelberg Project and that would be 2013 & 2014. In 2013 we lost: “Obstruction of Justice,” “House of Soul,” “Penny House,” “War House,” and the “Clock House.” In 2014 we lost: “The Doll House,” large amounts of the Detroit Industrial Gallery, “Birthday Cake House,” and the “Taxi Cab House.”