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Michigan History Museum - The Impact of Urban Renewal

Close up of part of the Black Bottom Street View exhibit.

Michigan History Museum - The Impact of Urban Renewal

2025-10-23T13:00:00 2025-10-23T15:00:00 Michigan History Museum - The Impact of Urban Renewal

Twentieth century urban renewal practices had a profound impact on neighborhoods across Michigan. Two of them, Lansing’s Westside and Detroit’s Black Bottom, saw the destruction of homes, businesses and community institutions for the building of new highways. Learn the stories of those neighborhoods during “From Lansing to Black Bottom: The Impact of Urban Renewal,” a program at the Michigan History Center, on October 23, 2025, from 1-3 p.m.

The program will include screenings of oral history interviews from the Black Bottom Archives and the Historical Society of Greater Lansing’s documentary called, “They Even Took the Dirt,” as well as a panel discussion with former residents from both neighborhoods.

This event, presented by the Black Bottom Archives and the Historical Society of Greater Lansing, is free and open to the public.

702 W. Kalamazoo Street, Lansing, Michigan, 48915
Event Date

Start: October 23, 2025 1:00 PM

End: October 23, 2025 3:00 PM

Contact Information
Heather Lehman

Community Programs Specialist

Twentieth century urban renewal practices had a profound impact on neighborhoods across Michigan. Two of them, Lansing’s Westside and Detroit’s Black Bottom, saw the destruction of homes, businesses and community institutions for the building of new highways. Learn the stories of those neighborhoods during “From Lansing to Black Bottom: The Impact of Urban Renewal,” a program at the Michigan History Center, on October 23, 2025, from 1-3 p.m.

The program will include screenings of oral history interviews from the Black Bottom Archives and the Historical Society of Greater Lansing’s documentary called, “They Even Took the Dirt,” as well as a panel discussion with former residents from both neighborhoods.

This event, presented by the Black Bottom Archives and the Historical Society of Greater Lansing, is free and open to the public.