MOSAIC Fall 2017 | Page 36

Aerial view shows the vacant apartment building, since demolished, which sits on property that is now overflow parking. Lawton Street runs between the property and the seminary main campus. The street will be closed, secured, and lead to the new main entrance to the campus. EXPANDING OUR “FOOTPRINT” Blessing of vacant land begins major expansion of campus. T he holy water sprinkled by Archbishop Allen Vigneron mingled with the rain drops. Despite the stormy weather, the formal blessing by the archbishop initiating Sacred Heart’s property expansion project went on as planned, on Thursday afternoon, April 20. The blessing site was under a tent set up on Longfellow Street, which cuts across a 2.5 acre section of a city block. The seminary purchased the abandoned section from the City of Detroit in May 2016 with the inten- tion of expanding its campus footprint. A significant donation from a generous bene- factor was used to finance the purchase. Graciously attending the property bless- ing ceremony were City of Detroit adminis- trators Vicky Kovari and Arthur Jamison, representing Mayor Michael Duggan; Bishop Shedrick Clark and Elder Shed- rick Clark Jr. from nearby Clinton Street Greater Bethlehem Temple Church; and representatives from the Boston-Edison Historic District Association. Joining them were priests and deacons from throughout the archdiocese, along with seminarians, lay students, and Sacred Heart staff and faculty members, most of them standing under umbrellas. The property expansion ‘will have a direct and positive impact on how we carry out our mission.’ 34 Sacred Heart Major Seminary | Mosaic | Fall 2017 NEW ENTRANCE The six plots of land that make up the purchase site are directly west of the semi- nary, bordered by Chicago Boulevard to the north, Detroit Public Schools property to the south, Lawton Street to the east, and Genesee Street to the west. The block had contained a long-vacant, three-building apartment complex built in the late 1930s— since demolished on April 26—and trees, weeds, and scrub grass growing helter-skelter. Since the property blessing, the land has been cleared and the buildings’ de- bris hauled away. In place of the deserted streetscape, now there is an overflow park- ing area. Spaces for up to four hundred