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Founded | 2007 |
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Type | Recycling Center |
Location | |
Area served | Detroit, Michigan |
Website | Recycle Here! Drop-off Facility, Detroit Department of Public Works |
Recycle Here! is a recycling center and drop-off facility in New Center, Detroit that opened in 2007. The recycling center is located in the Warren Motor Car Company Building, now the Dreamtroit complex. The building was once a Lincoln Motor Car Company factory, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2020. The Lincoln Street Art Park is an adjacent sculpture garden of site-specific installations made from materials salvaged at Recycle Here!
Recycle Here! recycles paper, plastic, cardboard, glass, metal, books, styrofoam, shredded paper, as well as household hazardous waste. [1]
Recycle Here! was conceived of by co-founder Matthew Naimi in 2007, when he was working for the City of Detroit Public Works in curbside refuse collection and noticed a lack of recycling options for residents. [2]
In 2007, Recycle Here! was started through a partnership with the City of Detroit through the Greater Detroit Resource Recovery Authority (GDRRA) and the Department of Public Works. [3]
Recycle Here! has assisted with the creation of recycling programs in the Detroit Public Schools and the coordinated roll-out of curbside recycling and recycling education programs, with the Detroit GDRRA and DPW. The recycling center has also hosted cultural programs, such as musical performances, maker competitions, and comedy shows. [4] The space is also known for having street art in and outside the building, and the surrounding Lincoln Street Art Park. A mural of a bee by artist Carl Oxley III on the Warren Motor Car Company Building is the official logo of Recycle Here!
In 2010, the Green Living Science 501c3 was created by the staff at Recycle Here! to extend the work of Recycle Here! into educational outreach in the Detroit Public Schools. [5]
Recycle Here! Will occupy a commercial space in the Dreamtroit complex, a mixed-use affordable living complex that started building on the Lincoln Street Art Park property in 2022. [6] [7] The development involves building a new structure within the Warren Motor Car Company Building. [8]
Edsel Bryant Ford was an American business executive and philanthropist who was the only child of pioneering industrialist Henry Ford and his wife, Clara Jane Bryant Ford. He was the president of Ford Motor Company from 1919 until his death in 1943.
Albert Kahn was an American industrial architect who designed industrial plant complexes such as the Ford River Rouge automobile complex. He designed the construction of Detroit skyscrapers and office buildings as well as mansions in the city suburbs. He led an organization of hundreds of architect associates and in 1937 designed 19% of all architect-designed industrial factories in the United States. Under a unique contract in 1929, Kahn established a design and training office in Moscow, sending twenty-five staff there to train Soviet architects and engineers, and to design hundreds of industrial buildings under their first five-year plan. They trained more than 4,000 architects and engineers using Kahn's concepts. In 1943, the Franklin Institute posthumously awarded Kahn the Frank P. Brown Medal.
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This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Detroit, Michigan.
The Lincoln Motor Company Plant was an automotive plant at 6200 West Warren Avenue in Detroit, Michigan, later known as the Detroit Edison Warren Service Center. The complex was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1978, due to its historic association with World War I Liberty engines and the Lincoln Motor Company. However, the main structures were demolished in 2003 and NHL designation was withdrawn in 2005.
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The Lincoln Street Art Park is a sculpture garden and outdoor art gallery located in the Northwest Goldberg neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan. The Lincoln Street Art Park includes murals, street art, site-specific installations made from salvaged materials, and a stage. It is behind the Recycle Here! drop-off facility, and parts of the park pass under a railroad viaduct.
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