Detroit Revitalization Fellow - Celeste Layne

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Detroit Revitalization Fellow: Celeste Layne

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JAY WALLJASPER | TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2012

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Top 10 Feature Stories Detroit House: $100. Bold New Ideas for the City: Priceless. Phones are ringing off the hook. ABC and NPR want the scoop. Artists the world over want in. The hub-bub over what Mitch Cope and Gina Reichert are doing is over a few property purchases that totaled little over $5,000 -- including a house for a hundred bucks -- but you can't put a price tag on their ideas and the potential impact on their corner of Detroit. CELESTE LAYNE (SECOND FROM LEFT) AND THE BLIGHTBUSTERS

RELATED TAGS DETROIT, MOVE TO DETROIT, REDEVELOPMENT, URBAN LEADERSHIP JEFFERSON EAST, EAST RIVERFRONT

Celeste Layne brings experience from the streets of New York--literally--to her work revitalizing Detroit’s East Side. She implemented bike and pedestrian projects in the South Bronx and Harlem as project manager for the New York City Department of Transportation NYCDOT) under the helm of Janette Sadik Khan--who’s a hero to many for transforming

city streets into places for people, not just conduits for cars. Layne graduated with a degree in economics from DePaul University in Chicago and a Master’s in City and Regional Planning from the University of Pennsylvania. She now applies this education and experience to a seven-mile stretch of East Jefferson Avenue, which has been targeted as a prime opportunity to show how Detroit neighborhoods can bounce back. As Corridor Revitalization Director of the East Jefferson Corridor Collaborative, she’s focused on enlivening

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communities along East Jefferson between the Grosse Pointe city limits and I-375. The area, she says, is home to vital neighborhoods like Indian Village and Jefferson-Chalmers, with a wealth of historical architecture but not enough stores that serve the needs of community residents. "There are few businesses where people in Indian Village can walk."

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