When Joshua Akers read a column last spring about a well-known businessman driving a columnist around to his Detroit properties to prove he wasn鈥檛 contributing to the city鈥檚 blight, something didn鈥檛 add up.
鈥淚f someone is chauffeuring you around to different properties鈥攁 handful out of several hundred鈥攖hey鈥檙e going to make sure they鈥檝e mowed the lawn, picked up the trash,鈥 said Akers, a geographer and assistant professor in social sciences at 每日大赛. 鈥淚 wanted a way to show more properties and, in some cases, to figure out who these people were who were buying them.鈥
Akers and his colleagues Alex Hill, information designer, and Aaron Petcoff, web developer, created , an online mapping tool to identify property speculation in Detroit.
They found that speculators own nearly 20 percent of all land parcels in Detroit.
鈥淎ll speculation isn鈥檛 necessarily destructive,鈥 Akers said. 鈥淏ut many types of speculation that we鈥檙e seeing affect the city鈥檚 neighborhoods are detrimental. Not only does the condition of the property decline over time, but the property is essentially extracted from the community鈥攊t鈥檚 owned now simply for its exchange value.鈥
Akers said the intent of the site is to show how speculative property ownership is actively shaping the conditions of Detroit neighborhoods. It builds on his previous work on property markets in Detroit.
鈥淧eople often think of Detroit鈥檚 decline as a passive process; they鈥檒l use suburbanization and deindustrialization to explain it. And those have had a very real impact on Detroit,鈥 Akers said. 鈥淏ut what we鈥檙e seeing today is a very active process of people buying, selling, exchanging and holding properties to give us the landscape we have today.鈥
The site shows speculator-owned properties within the city, with the group defining speculation as having one of four properties:
- Ownership of three or more parcels in an area in which the owner does not have a taxable address;
- Ownership of a large number of parcels in varying conditions and disuse;
- Single vacant or abandoned property held by an owner with an out-of-state or international address; or
- Residential property that serves as a taxable address for multiple owners with three or more holdings in the city.
Each listing includes names of owners listed by the City of Detroit Assessor鈥檚 Office, and owner or member names of Limited Liability Companies (LLCs). And users can search properties by owner name, address or ZIP code.
Most listings also include images provided by Google Street View. Future versions of the site will provide images of the properties over multiple years to show how they have changed over time.
Akers has heard from community leaders who want to contact property owners but don鈥檛 know how to locate them. He believes that by providing property information in an easily accessible format, residents will be better equipped to start conversations about everything from purchasing properties to fighting those who are blighting neighborhoods.
鈥淚t takes a lot of time and research to figure out who these people are. So what this project does is provides at least a snapshot of properties at a certain point in time. It鈥檚 a start,鈥 Akers said. 鈥淲e hope the information allows community groups, activists and individuals to take an even more direct role in shaping the places they live.鈥