Cities structure our lives and identities. Traditional cities are built around the human being, and all the buildings and facilities are built for humans.
However, the advent of the post-industrial era has brought irreversible changes to many industrial cities. How to reuse these urban heritages is a problem that human beings must face and solve in the future.
Detroit is one of the largest post-industrial cities in the world. After the industrial decline, what is the future of Detroit? Where is the beginning of the great revival? These questions plague every resident and ambitious architect and planner.
Empty streets, abandoned houses, wild animals wandering around on the roads, and vacant lands where weeds sprawl. What can we do in such a situation?
This design takes the Packard Plant as the starting point to propose a better future for people, nature, and animals to live together. It aims to generate a green, energy-efficient, self-supplying urban village that seeks a predictable future for Detroit throu