Abstract

This paper provides an alternative narrative of Detroit from one of economic struggle and racial division. It instead discusses other forces at play, focusing on questionable moral standing and its relationship to built form, specifically the city. The paper explores whether a compelling claim on building’s moral use can be established, and in doing so seeks to establish a causal link between moral relationship and the built environment. Moral relationship is established through three main avenues. The first is a brief discussion of Detroit’s history, particularly its history from WWII onward, in order to establish the complex moral context into which this argument is situated. The second avenue provides a concise summary of Stanley Cavell’s moral framework and discusses the conundrum of having moral obligation in the absence of moral relationship. The final avenue is a look to the famous Renaissance Center as emblematic of the moral relationship at play. The resulting form of analysis relies on the premises that buildings can embody the knowledge and agreement required for (moral) relationship, and that buildings are artifacts of moral relationship. The paper concludes that buildings are therefore morally appraisable, which is to say they can be appraised for their moral appropriateness.

Highlights

  • Detroit’s story as one of economic struggle and racial division is well-known and publicized

  • The paper will explore whether a compelling claim on building’s moral use can be established, and in doing so it will seek to establish a causal link between moral relationship and the built environment

  • Key in Detroit’s alternative narrative is the city planning and management’s lack of response to the changing city, which this paper argues brings the status of moral relationship critically into question

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Summary

Introduction

Detroit’s story as one of economic struggle and racial division is well-known and publicized. Sugrue attests that: In cities like Detroit, social reformers and federal officials fought to erect public housing sufficient to meet the needs of those whom the market failed to serve.

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