Detroit plans neighborhood solar fields to capture light from blight

  • Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan announces Gratiot-Findlay, State Fair and Van Dyke-Lynch neighborhoods as sites for possible solar arrays, with DTE Energy and Boston-based Lightstar Renewables chosen as developers.
  • Homeowners in five other neighborhoods under consideration for solar fields are being given a chance to sell their houses now, before the next three projects are selected in 2025.  
  •  Duggan proposes using $4.4 million in an equity fund to purchase homes from those in the five neighborhoods still being considered for the next phase of projects.

Three Detroit neighborhoods have been selected to host solar fields that the city of Detroit says will help offset the energy used by city buildings.

Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan said at a Monday press conference that the Gratiot-Findlay, State Fair and Van Dyke-Lynch neighborhoods had been selected for solar fields. The neighborhoods identified by the city Monday would host roughly 104 acres solar out of a total of 200 acres planned over six projects. The city plans to have DTE Energy and Boston-based Lightstar Renewables each develop three projects.

“Today, Detroit takes a step into a major national leadership role in fighting climate change,” Duggan said at the event in the footprint of the Gratiot-Findlay project.

Related:

Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, wearing a blue suit, talks to a group of residents. They are all outside
Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan talks with residents in the Gratiot-Findlay neighborhood, one of three areas selected for the city’s first neighborhood solar projects. Credit: City of Detroit Flickr

“One-hundred twenty-seven city buildings are currently powered by 33 megawatts of energy per year from traditional sources, largely fossil fuels,” Duggan said. “In the next two years, we are going to build solar fields that are going to produce that 33 megawatts of energy in renewable energy, effectively generating all the power for city buildings from solar fields.”

Duggan has pitched the Neighborhood Solar Initiative as a way to fight climate change and cut down on illegal dumping by fencing off abandoned areas. But community engagement around the plan has been fraught, with some feeling the plan is a unique opportunity to clean up largely abandoned blocks and invest in neighborhoods while others fear large solar arrays could hurt property values and drive further disinvestment.

Duggan said Monday that the program targets “some of the most blighted areas in the city” and would be “helping neighborhoods that think they’ve been forgotten.”

Homeowners in the footprint of the proposed solar fields stand to receive twice the fair market value of their homes or $90,000, whichever is higher, while renters will get 18 months of rent to relocate. Homeowners within community benefits areas surrounding the projects will receive $15,000 to $25,000 each for energy efficiency upgrades.

A total of 21 homeowners will be relocated for the first three projects. The city will use condemnation to acquire the property of landlords and vacant landowners.

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