flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Hantz Woodlands brings thousands of trees to hard-pressed Detroit neighborhoods

Movers+Shapers

Hantz Woodlands brings thousands of trees to hard-pressed Detroit neighborhoods

One of the city's richest residents, John Hantz, is buying hundreds of acres of vacant property, tearing down dilapidated structures, and planting trees in the space.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | June 17, 2016
Hantz Woodlands brings thousands of trees to hard-pressed Detroit neighborhoods

On one 3½-acre lot, 330 tires and 150 cubic yards of trash had to be removed. Hantz Farms started planting trees there last November. Photo: Atlas Industries.

On May 7, 1,200 volunteers planted 3,150 six-foot sugar maples around the new learning laboratory of the Detroit Enterprise Academy, a K-8 public charter school.

The tree-planting campaign was the third in as many years for Hantz Woodlands, the brainchild of John Hantz, founder of Hantz Group, a financial services conglomerate.

Eight years ago, Hantz, one of Detroit’s richest residents, became distressed by the blight he saw around him. Within Detroit’s 140-square-mile boundary sat 40 square miles of abandoned or near-undevelopable land and buildings. The city owned about a third of these properties through foreclosure but couldn’t afford the $360 million needed to maintain the holdings.

Hantz launched Hantz Farms to convert vacant property to farmland. He approached the city with a plan to acquire up to 10,000 acres for $30 million. The city didn't like the idea of farming the land, so Hantz offered to plant trees in existing neighborhoods through an entity called Hantz Woodlands.

The plan narrowly won city approval in late 2012. In his first deal, Hantz paid the state of Michigan $500,000 for 1,550 properties on 150 acres of city-owned land. Hantz Farms has torn down 61 structures, but another 250 still need to be demolished.

As of late April, Hantz had purchased 180 acres in a square-mile area. He intends to acquire 200 additional acres this year.

The land is never fenced in, to make sure the local community has access.

Last December, the city’s planning director, Maurice Cox, credited Hantz Woodlands with inspiring a new city-run eco-program that will target two quarter-mile-square districts with either “green” tree planting, or “blue” treatment, such as rainwater gardens.

Tags

Related Stories

K-12 Schools | Apr 30, 2024

Fully electric Oregon elementary school aims for net-zero carbon and resiliency

The River Grove Elementary School in Oregon was designed for net-zero carbon and resiliency to seismic events, storms, and wildfire. The roughly 82,000-sf school in a Portland suburb will feature a microgrid—a small-scale power grid that operates independently from the area’s electric grid. 

75 Top Building Products | Apr 22, 2024

Enter today! BD+C's 75 Top Building Products for 2024

BD+C editors are now accepting submissions for the annual 75 Top Building Products awards. The winners will be featured in the November/December 2024 issue of Building Design+Construction. 

Codes and Standards | Apr 12, 2024

ICC eliminates building electrification provisions from 2024 update

The International Code Council stripped out provisions from the 2024 update to the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) that would have included beefed up circuitry for hooking up electric appliances and car chargers.

Codes and Standards | Apr 8, 2024

First federal blueprint to decarbonize U.S. buildings sector released

The Biden Administration recently released “Decarbonizing the U.S. Economy by 2050: A National Blueprint for the Buildings Sector,” a comprehensive plan to reduce greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions from buildings by 65% by 2035 and 90% by 2050.

Green | Apr 8, 2024

LEED v5 released for public comment

The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has opened the first public comment period for the first draft of LEED v5. The new version of the LEED green building rating system will drive deep decarbonization, quality of life improvements, and ecological conservation and restoration, USGBC says. 

Codes and Standards | Apr 8, 2024

Boston’s plans to hold back rising seawater stall amid real estate slowdown

Boston has placed significant aspects of its plan to protect the city from rising sea levels on the actions of private developers. Amid a post-Covid commercial development slump, though, efforts to build protective infrastructure have stalled.

Green | Mar 25, 2024

Zero-carbon multifamily development designed for transactive energy

Living EmPower House, which is set to be the first zero-carbon, replicable, and equitable multifamily development designed for transactive energy, recently was awarded a $9 million Next EPIC Grant Construction Loan from the State of California. 

Sustainability | Mar 21, 2024

World’s first TRUE-certified building project completed in California

GENESIS Marina, an expansive laboratory and office campus in Brisbane, Calif., is the world’s first Total Resource Use and Efficiency (TRUE)-certified construction endeavor. The certification recognizes projects that achieve outstanding levels of resource efficiency through waste reduction, reuse, and recycling practices.

Green | Mar 5, 2024

New York City’s Green Economy Action Plan aims for building decarbonization

New York City’s recently revealed Green Economy Action Plan includes the goals of the decarbonization of buildings and developing a renewable energy system. The ambitious plan includes enabling low-carbon alternatives in the transportation sector and boosting green industries, aiming to create more than 12,000 green economy apprenticeships by 2040.

MFPRO+ News | Feb 15, 2024

Nine states pledge to transition to heat pumps for residential HVAC and water heating

Nine states have signed a joint agreement to accelerate the transition to residential building electrification by significantly expanding heat pump sales to meet heating, cooling, and water heating demand. The Memorandum of Understanding was signed by directors of environmental agencies from California, Colorado, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, and Rhode Island. 

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021