Reclaiming Oblivion: Sacral Assemblies in Poletown, Detroit 

Date
Author
Andrew M. Schwartz (MLA II ’26)
Prizes

Department of Landscape Architecture MLA II 2026 Thesis Prize

Faculty Advisor
Charles Waldheim

This thesis imagines the future post-industrial landscape of Detroit’s General Motors Assembly Plant as the medium through which the 1981 expropriation and destruction of the Poletown neighborhood are spatially registered.  

Proposed as a 2035 scenario, the project reclaims the 400-acre site as a public commons and memorial landscape through two overlapping programs: The Campau Cut, which reestablishes a former roadway as a mile-long connective pedestrian greenway, and The Sacral Circuit, a perimeter loop  linking three landscapes recalled from oblivion—a grotto, a forested cemetery, and a plaza. 

Together, these interventions construct a collective landscape in which burial, labor, and congregation are held in relation. Rather than presenting a false reconciliation between nature, economy, and human loss, the proposal challenges frameworks of remediation and restoration applied to post-industrial sites by foregrounding landscape as a medium capable of holding absence without resolution, reclaiming ground where public use an remembrance remain in tension.