Accessible Parks & Rec

Two projects are in the works to help promote healthier living throughout metro Detroit.
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A rendering shows Henry Ford Hospital鈥檚 main campus. A park, green spaces, and basketball courts are also in the works. // Rendering courtesy of Henry Ford Health

In early 2023, it was announced that the Detroit Pistons, Henry Ford Health, Michigan State University, and billionaire businessman Tom Gores had teamed up to create an interconnected, walkable, health-conscious community within Detroit鈥檚 New Center neighborhood. The groundbreaking took place this past May, and the plan is projected to take a decade to complete.

In the end, across West Grand Boulevard that will include, in part, a new patient tower and a $335 million research facility. Also expect contemporary residential, commercial, and retail spaces and possibly a hotel.

It all feels almost overwhelmingly grand. Still, the proprietors promise a commitment to community throughout the process and a proactive approach to healthy living.

鈥淭his entire project is for the people of Detroit,鈥 notes Barry Blackwell, manager of community relations for Henry Ford Health. 鈥淓ven before we publicly announced the project, we met with members of the community to learn their priorities. They told us they want their neighborhood to feel walkable, welcoming, and interconnected, and that is reflected in our plans. Their input shaped our vision for the hospital campus.鈥

He says Henry Ford鈥檚 engagement team has hosted more than 100 community meetings since the project was announced.

The venture will see to the construction of a centralized community park and accompanying green spaces, along with free and accessible basketball courts. The latter will sit just south of the Henry Ford Detroit Pistons Performance Center. A Henry Ford Health spokesperson says, 鈥淥ur efforts are focused on creating a vibrant and dynamic urban environment 鈥 that can be used for programming by our organizations and the community.鈥

A Joint Effort

Priority Health has helped open fitness courts, like this one on Belle Isle, across Michigan. // Photograph courtesy of Priority Health

A more low-key but no less potentially impactful project is across Michigan. In 2019, alongside other big-name health care providers, Priority Health joined the , an enterprise that aims to build healthy communities and schools with open-air fitness courts as the center point.

As of early August, 21 courts have been built so far, including ones in Madison Heights, Highland Park, Redford Township, Lansing, and Lincoln Park and even one nestled on Belle Isle. Visitors won鈥檛 find dumbbells, kettlebells, or convoluted machinery. Instead, the fitness courts feature seven stations that can be completed in just seven minutes and are designed to allow users to 鈥渓everage their own body weight to get a complete workout,鈥 says Praveen Thadani, president and CEO of Priority Health. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e made with best-in-class materials, 鈥 designed and engineered to withstand the elements in every environment. And so across all seasons that we experience in Michigan, they are still usable.鈥

Community members can also download the Fitness Court app to serve as a digital coach of sorts.

Priority Health plans to have 30 fitness courts up and operational by the end of 2025, and that鈥檚 only the beginning. The hope is that when they鈥檙e finished, a third of Michiganders will have access to one of these courts. Whether physical, logistical, or emotional, the barriers to health are real, and Thadani says, 鈥淭he campaign works to address the obesity epidemic by removing barriers to exercise and improving quality of life 鈥 regardless of financial status, regardless of their ethnic status, regardless of their fitness level or age.鈥


This story originally appeared in the October 2024 issue of 黑料网 Detroit magazine. To read more, pick up a copy of 黑料网 Detroit at a local retail outlet. Our will be available on Oct. 7.