In 2010, the Paradise Valley plan was updated to reduce its project footprint from 3,200 acres to 2,000 acres with approximately 8,000 mixed dwelling units. The plan maintains its goals to be self-sufficient with all basic services and amenities provided for within the new town to reduce the need to drive outside the community.
Previous Paradise Valley plan
Paradise Valley would be made up of 12,900 mixed dwelling units in a series of villages built over 25 years. Paradise Valley would be self-sufficient and have its own self-contained services and goods all within the new town, which would reduce residents' need to drive outside the community.
The plan called for 2,000 acres (810ha) on site would be set for parks and open space
Design
Paradise Valley’s goal is to implement conscientious and sustainable development principles in order to create a place where neighborhoods and communities are balanced with the natural environment.
The plan is designed to reduce the use of automobile by creating a highly connective walkable neighborhood. The design incorporates a network of bicycling and walking trails linking the residential neighborhoods to the town center, parks, and open space.
Paradise Valley is the sixth studio album by musician John Mayer. Musically, it is similar to his previous album, Born and Raised, which was released in 2012. However, this album features more musical breaks and instrumentals consisting of electric guitars rather than harmonica. It was released on August 20, 2013. The album's title is derived from a major river valley of the Yellowstone River with the same name, located in southwestern Montana.
The album's first single, "Paper Doll", was released on June 18, 2013, followed by "Wildfire" on July 16, 2013. "Wildfire" officially impacted Triple A radio on August 20, 2013. "Who You Love" was released as the third single, impacting Hot AC radio on September 3, 2013.
On August 13, 2013, Paradise Valley became available to stream in its entirety via iTunes. One week later it became available for iTunes download.
Release and promotion
On August 19, 2013, Mayer went on the Late Show with David Letterman to promote the album by singing the second single from the release, "Wildfire". In addition, Mayer did a concert in the Live on Letterman series the same night, which is a web stream event.
Black Bottom was a predominantly black neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan. The name of the neighborhood is often erroneously believed to be a reference to black people, but was given to the area by the original French settlers for of its dark topsoil. The Black Bottom–Paradise Valley became known for its significant contribution to American music including Blues, Big Band, and Jazz from the 1930s to the 1950s. Located on Detroit's near east side, both Black Bottom and Paradise Valley were bounded by Brush Street to the west, and the Grand Trunk railroad tracks to the east. Bisected by Gratiot Avenue, stretching south to the Detroit River was Black Bottom and stretching north to Grand Boulevard was Paradise Valley. Black Bottom and Paradise Valley were eventually cleared and replaced by various urban renewal projects, and had ceased to exist by the 1960s.
Montanai/mɒnˈtænə/ is a state in the Western region of the United States. The state's name is derived from the Spanish word montaña (mountain). Montana has several nicknames, although none official, including "Big Sky Country" and "The Treasure State", and slogans that include "Land of the Shining Mountains" and more recently "The Last Best Place". Montana is ranked 4th in size, but 44th in population and 48th in population density of the 50 United States. The western third of Montana contains numerous mountain ranges. Smaller island ranges are found throughout the state. In total, 77 named ranges are part of the Rocky Mountains.
The economy is primarily based on agriculture, including ranching and cereal grain farming. Other significant economic activities include oil, gas, coal and hard rock mining, lumber, and the fastest-growing sector, tourism. The health care, service, and government sectors also are significant to the state's economy. Millions of tourists annually visit Glacier National Park, the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument, and Yellowstone National Park.
The vessel was intended for operation as a blockade runner supplying Confederate Forces in the American Civil War. It was on its maiden voyage from London, headed ultimately for Wilmington in North Carolina.
She was carrying cargo from Britain to help the Confederates. Britain could not be seen to be directly aiding the Confederates, hence various levels of secrecy were used for this and similar vessels. For example, at the time she was using an assumed name of Nola, a ruse to help avoid the attention of Union forces. She had used at least two other names at various times, namely the Gloria, and Paramount.
Captain Pittman was in command of the vessel, and saw her safely across a rough Atlantic Ocean as far as Bermuda, where Pittman planned to stop to take on coal before departing for Wilmington. The ship hit the reef of Bermuda's north shore, in an area known as the Western Blue Cut on 30 December 1863.
Montana is a Mesoamerican archaeological site on the Pacific coastal plain of southern Guatemala. It is located in the department of Escuintla, near Balberta, and is one of the largest Mesoamerican archaeological sites on the Pacific Coast of Guatemala.
History
Around AD 400, in the Early Classic period, Montana replaced Balberta as the regional capital. The investigating archaeologists consider that Montana was founded as a colony by the great metropolis of Teotihuacan in the distant Valley of Mexico in order to supply that city with locally produced products such as cacao, cotton and rubber and to provide a trade route to the great highland city of Kaminaljuyu and to the Maya lowlands across the Sierra Madre de Chiapas.
The establishment of the Teotihuacan colony at Montana resulted in the collapse of the important nearby site of Balberta and the new capital flourished until about AD 600, dominating the region for about 200 years. This coincides with the period of Teotihuacan contact at Kaminaljuyu. The production of local copies of Teotihuacan artifacts ceased by the close of the Early Classic, coinciding with widespread destruction in the centre of Teotihuacan and the decline of that city and indicating the end of Montana as a colony.
Detroit Classic - The Rise and Fall of Detroit's Black Bottom"
published: 18 May 2016
Uniquely Detroit: The history of Black Bottom & Paradise Valley
Explore the history of Hastings Street in Detroit's former Black Bottom and Paradise Valley neighborhoods.
published: 05 Apr 2018
Remembering Detroit's Black Bottom neighborhood
Today, the area once known as Black Bottom is unrecognizable from the social, economic and cultural hub it was in the first half of the 1900s.
published: 29 Feb 2020
Detroit's former Black Bottom neighborhood gets historical marker
On Monday community leaders, historians and those who called Detroit's famous Black Bottom home, gathered to celebrate the dedication of a historical marker to honor the once famous neighborhood and to recall the truth about its past.
published: 10 Aug 2021
Urban renewal erases Black Bottom area in Detroit
A plan to remove Interstate 375 will not bring back the rich history lost when the area was razed to make way for the new road running through the center of Detroit in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
For the complete story: https://bit.ly/3yZNtkX
For more Detroit and Michigan news, sports and entertainment, follow the Detroit Free Press on:
Facebook - https://bit.ly/2T7zuV9
Twitter - https://bit.ly/2JeixbW
Instagram - https://bit.ly/2Chb7hR
Online - https://www.freep.com
#detroit #michigan
published: 15 Jul 2021
1989 Detroit Black Journal Clip: The City’s Historic Black Bottom Neighborhood
A 1989 Detroit Black Journal interview about the city’s historic Black Bottom Neighborhood. Episode 4726/Segment 2
published: 31 May 2019
Paradise Exposed: A New View on Old Detroit
A large collection of photographs of old Detroit was recently donated to the Walter P. Reuther Library at Wayne State University. It’s believed the photos are from historic African-American neighborhoods like Black Bottom and Paradise Valley, but the names, dates, and exact locations are a mystery — for now. Discover more at http://s.mlive.com/mNBkPPe
published: 27 Jun 2016
Michigan Historical Marker Designated to Detroit’s Historic Black Bottom Neighborhood | Clip
The rich history of Detroit’s predominantly African American neighborhood known as Black Bottom is being celebrated with the installation of a Michigan historic marker.
The area was home to several prosperous black businesses and residents until it was demolished in the late 1950s to early 1960s to make way for interstate 375 and the Lafayette Park residential district.
One Detroit contributor AJ Walker was there for this long-awaited tribute to an important chapter in the city’s African American history.
Watch "One Detroit" Monday and Thursday on Detroit Public TV at 7:30p ET. Or catch the daily conversations on our website at https://OneDetroitPBS.org, Facebook at http://facebook.com/onedetroit, Twitter at https://twitter.com/OneDetroitDPTV and Instagram @One.Detroit.
published: 31 Mar 2022
'Hastings Street' Musical, A Story of Detroit's Black Bottom Neighborhood | ABJ Clip
It was the summer of 1949 when Detroit began ushering in a new wave of urban renewal, and Detroit's Black Bottom neighborhood quickly became the target for the bulk of the city's urban redevelopment. The Plowshares Theatre Company's new musical "Hastings Street" depicts the life of one African American family, the Carsons, in flux as the city unravels a host of changes of its own. The musical runs through July 31, 2022 at the Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts.
Before the world premiere of the musical, "American Black Journal" producer Marcus Green takes viewers behind the scenes to a rehearsal to see how the musical came together. Plus, Green talks with the musical's co-creators, jazz trumpeter/composer Kris Johnson, actor/singer John Sloan III, and Plowshares Theatre Artistic Di...
published: 26 Jul 2022
Former Black Bottom resident, historians talk legacy of 'Detroit's forgotten neighborhood'
It's described by some historians as one of Detroit's "forgotten neighborhoods," a victim of post-war urban renewal.
On Monday community leaders, historians and those who called Detroit's famous Black Bottom home, gathered to celebrate the dedication of a historical marker to ...
On Monday community leaders, historians and those who called Detroit's famous Black Bottom home, gathered to celebrate the dedication of a historical marker to honor the once famous neighborhood and to recall the truth about its past.
On Monday community leaders, historians and those who called Detroit's famous Black Bottom home, gathered to celebrate the dedication of a historical marker to honor the once famous neighborhood and to recall the truth about its past.
A plan to remove Interstate 375 will not bring back the rich history lost when the area was razed to make way for the new road running through the center of Det...
A plan to remove Interstate 375 will not bring back the rich history lost when the area was razed to make way for the new road running through the center of Detroit in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
For the complete story: https://bit.ly/3yZNtkX
For more Detroit and Michigan news, sports and entertainment, follow the Detroit Free Press on:
Facebook - https://bit.ly/2T7zuV9
Twitter - https://bit.ly/2JeixbW
Instagram - https://bit.ly/2Chb7hR
Online - https://www.freep.com
#detroit #michigan
A plan to remove Interstate 375 will not bring back the rich history lost when the area was razed to make way for the new road running through the center of Detroit in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
For the complete story: https://bit.ly/3yZNtkX
For more Detroit and Michigan news, sports and entertainment, follow the Detroit Free Press on:
Facebook - https://bit.ly/2T7zuV9
Twitter - https://bit.ly/2JeixbW
Instagram - https://bit.ly/2Chb7hR
Online - https://www.freep.com
#detroit #michigan
A large collection of photographs of old Detroit was recently donated to the Walter P. Reuther Library at Wayne State University. It’s believed the photos are f...
A large collection of photographs of old Detroit was recently donated to the Walter P. Reuther Library at Wayne State University. It’s believed the photos are from historic African-American neighborhoods like Black Bottom and Paradise Valley, but the names, dates, and exact locations are a mystery — for now. Discover more at http://s.mlive.com/mNBkPPe
A large collection of photographs of old Detroit was recently donated to the Walter P. Reuther Library at Wayne State University. It’s believed the photos are from historic African-American neighborhoods like Black Bottom and Paradise Valley, but the names, dates, and exact locations are a mystery — for now. Discover more at http://s.mlive.com/mNBkPPe
The rich history of Detroit’s predominantly African American neighborhood known as Black Bottom is being celebrated with the installation of a Michigan historic...
The rich history of Detroit’s predominantly African American neighborhood known as Black Bottom is being celebrated with the installation of a Michigan historic marker.
The area was home to several prosperous black businesses and residents until it was demolished in the late 1950s to early 1960s to make way for interstate 375 and the Lafayette Park residential district.
One Detroit contributor AJ Walker was there for this long-awaited tribute to an important chapter in the city’s African American history.
Watch "One Detroit" Monday and Thursday on Detroit Public TV at 7:30p ET. Or catch the daily conversations on our website at https://OneDetroitPBS.org, Facebook at http://facebook.com/onedetroit, Twitter at https://twitter.com/OneDetroitDPTV and Instagram @One.Detroit.
The rich history of Detroit’s predominantly African American neighborhood known as Black Bottom is being celebrated with the installation of a Michigan historic marker.
The area was home to several prosperous black businesses and residents until it was demolished in the late 1950s to early 1960s to make way for interstate 375 and the Lafayette Park residential district.
One Detroit contributor AJ Walker was there for this long-awaited tribute to an important chapter in the city’s African American history.
Watch "One Detroit" Monday and Thursday on Detroit Public TV at 7:30p ET. Or catch the daily conversations on our website at https://OneDetroitPBS.org, Facebook at http://facebook.com/onedetroit, Twitter at https://twitter.com/OneDetroitDPTV and Instagram @One.Detroit.
It was the summer of 1949 when Detroit began ushering in a new wave of urban renewal, and Detroit's Black Bottom neighborhood quickly became the target for the ...
It was the summer of 1949 when Detroit began ushering in a new wave of urban renewal, and Detroit's Black Bottom neighborhood quickly became the target for the bulk of the city's urban redevelopment. The Plowshares Theatre Company's new musical "Hastings Street" depicts the life of one African American family, the Carsons, in flux as the city unravels a host of changes of its own. The musical runs through July 31, 2022 at the Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts.
Before the world premiere of the musical, "American Black Journal" producer Marcus Green takes viewers behind the scenes to a rehearsal to see how the musical came together. Plus, Green talks with the musical's co-creators, jazz trumpeter/composer Kris Johnson, actor/singer John Sloan III, and Plowshares Theatre Artistic Director Gary Anderson about the making of the musical, the Detroit history it represents, and the message viewers can take away from the performance.
Episode 5030/Segment 2
It was the summer of 1949 when Detroit began ushering in a new wave of urban renewal, and Detroit's Black Bottom neighborhood quickly became the target for the bulk of the city's urban redevelopment. The Plowshares Theatre Company's new musical "Hastings Street" depicts the life of one African American family, the Carsons, in flux as the city unravels a host of changes of its own. The musical runs through July 31, 2022 at the Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts.
Before the world premiere of the musical, "American Black Journal" producer Marcus Green takes viewers behind the scenes to a rehearsal to see how the musical came together. Plus, Green talks with the musical's co-creators, jazz trumpeter/composer Kris Johnson, actor/singer John Sloan III, and Plowshares Theatre Artistic Director Gary Anderson about the making of the musical, the Detroit history it represents, and the message viewers can take away from the performance.
Episode 5030/Segment 2
On Monday community leaders, historians and those who called Detroit's famous Black Bottom home, gathered to celebrate the dedication of a historical marker to honor the once famous neighborhood and to recall the truth about its past.
A plan to remove Interstate 375 will not bring back the rich history lost when the area was razed to make way for the new road running through the center of Detroit in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
For the complete story: https://bit.ly/3yZNtkX
For more Detroit and Michigan news, sports and entertainment, follow the Detroit Free Press on:
Facebook - https://bit.ly/2T7zuV9
Twitter - https://bit.ly/2JeixbW
Instagram - https://bit.ly/2Chb7hR
Online - https://www.freep.com
#detroit #michigan
A large collection of photographs of old Detroit was recently donated to the Walter P. Reuther Library at Wayne State University. It’s believed the photos are from historic African-American neighborhoods like Black Bottom and Paradise Valley, but the names, dates, and exact locations are a mystery — for now. Discover more at http://s.mlive.com/mNBkPPe
The rich history of Detroit’s predominantly African American neighborhood known as Black Bottom is being celebrated with the installation of a Michigan historic marker.
The area was home to several prosperous black businesses and residents until it was demolished in the late 1950s to early 1960s to make way for interstate 375 and the Lafayette Park residential district.
One Detroit contributor AJ Walker was there for this long-awaited tribute to an important chapter in the city’s African American history.
Watch "One Detroit" Monday and Thursday on Detroit Public TV at 7:30p ET. Or catch the daily conversations on our website at https://OneDetroitPBS.org, Facebook at http://facebook.com/onedetroit, Twitter at https://twitter.com/OneDetroitDPTV and Instagram @One.Detroit.
It was the summer of 1949 when Detroit began ushering in a new wave of urban renewal, and Detroit's Black Bottom neighborhood quickly became the target for the bulk of the city's urban redevelopment. The Plowshares Theatre Company's new musical "Hastings Street" depicts the life of one African American family, the Carsons, in flux as the city unravels a host of changes of its own. The musical runs through July 31, 2022 at the Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts.
Before the world premiere of the musical, "American Black Journal" producer Marcus Green takes viewers behind the scenes to a rehearsal to see how the musical came together. Plus, Green talks with the musical's co-creators, jazz trumpeter/composer Kris Johnson, actor/singer John Sloan III, and Plowshares Theatre Artistic Director Gary Anderson about the making of the musical, the Detroit history it represents, and the message viewers can take away from the performance.
Episode 5030/Segment 2
In 2010, the Paradise Valley plan was updated to reduce its project footprint from 3,200 acres to 2,000 acres with approximately 8,000 mixed dwelling units. The plan maintains its goals to be self-sufficient with all basic services and amenities provided for within the new town to reduce the need to drive outside the community.
Previous Paradise Valley plan
Paradise Valley would be made up of 12,900 mixed dwelling units in a series of villages built over 25 years. Paradise Valley would be self-sufficient and have its own self-contained services and goods all within the new town, which would reduce residents' need to drive outside the community.
The plan called for 2,000 acres (810ha) on site would be set for parks and open space
Design
Paradise Valley’s goal is to implement conscientious and sustainable development principles in order to create a place where neighborhoods and communities are balanced with the natural environment.
The plan is designed to reduce the use of automobile by creating a highly connective walkable neighborhood. The design incorporates a network of bicycling and walking trails linking the residential neighborhoods to the town center, parks, and open space.
At the MontanaSociety, a 12-step-based sober living and work camp in Paradise Valley, residents are restoring the ruins of an underground Cold Warera nuclear bunker into a vaulted-roomed, post-atomic retreat ... .
At the MontanaSociety, a 12-step-based sober living and work camp in Paradise Valley, residents are restoring the ruins of an underground Cold War-era nuclear bunker into a vaulted-roomed, post-atomic retreat ... .
Jeff Bridges and his wife, Susan, continue to be deeply in love after 48 years of marriage ... Keep reading to find out what he said… ... At the time, Susan was a 21-year-old waitress at a restaurant in Paradise Valley, Montana ... Credit ... I have that.” ... .
They established Svalinn, which in Nordic mythology refers to a shield protecting the world, at a former equestrian-training facility outside Livingston in Montana’s Paradise Valley.
At the MontanaSociety, a 12-step-based sober living center and work camp in Paradise Valley, residents are restoring the ruins of an underground cold-war era nuclear bunker into a vaulted-roomed, 5,000-square-foot retreat.