A city down on its luck

Detroit starts making its own, and it’s pretty good

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"I've never been to New York City, but I imagine it's like this," Steve Snell said. "What I'd hope is that Detroit becomes a place where you can walk to things like this."

Detroit's promise is in part a function of its well-documented struggles, which have been told in countless films and books, among them last year's "The Ruins of Detroit," a $125, 200-glossy-page book of Detroit's most arresting wreckage.

But the city's depleted population also has made hatching plans relatively simple and cheap. A group of local graphic design and architecture students just started Urban Put-Put, a miniature-golf course beside the city's ultimate blight (or haunting beauty, if you prefer) – the towering, empty, 100-year-old Michigan Central train station.

Similarly, Jacques Driscoll wanted to open a restaurant two years ago in San Diego, where he was living, but realized it would be easier to do back home in Detroit. In March he launched Green Dot Stables, a restaurant serving gourmet sliders – think elk, lamb and marinated tempeh with wasabi mayo – and Michigan craft beer for the very Detroit prices of $2 and $3 per item.

From the outside, Green Dot looks like the same beaten-down, windowless dive it was before Driscoll took over, all the way down to the Diners Club International sign hanging out front. Inside, however, Driscoll spent a year rehabilitating the 1970s-era wood floor and brick walls while capitalizing on his predecessor's kitschy racetrack theme. The result, a comfortable, affordable place where you'd happily eat sliders and drink good beer for hours, embodies Detroit 2013: lively, impressive and slightly askew.

"People ask, 'Why would you leave a nice place like San Diego for Detroit?'" Driscoll said. "It's hard to explain without taking them around for a couple days and showing them what's going on."

So people, like Driscoll, do that. Detroit is a city long on pride, and – purely my guess – its sense of united struggle makes it friendlier than most places. Driscoll, for instance, met tourists from Montreal staying in a campground across the Detroit River last year.

When they told him they were just checking out Detroit for a few days, he not only offered to show them around, but he also put them up.

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