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"Thank God that smell is gone": Detroit incinerator to be demolished after decades of complaints

You can see the smokestack to be demolished just to the right of the Environmental Enforcement Office. The location is near the intersection of I-94 and I-75 in Detroit.
Graham, Lester
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You can see the smokestack to be demolished just to the right of the Environmental Enforcement Office. The location is near the intersection of I-94 and I-75 in Detroit.

A Detroit trash incinerator will be demolished after decades of complaints about air pollution and strong odors of rotten eggs and rotting garbage.

The incinerator has been cited many times for violating air quality standards.

Mayor Mike Duggan says it will be demolished beginning this summer and should be gone by the end of the year.

Adam Verville says he has lived near the incinerator for 15 years.

“The really like sweet rot odor was like my least favorite. Some days it would be so intense you couldn’t even open your windows or really enjoy being outdoors because it was so intense and constant," he said.

Duggan has not yet announced what the city plans to do with the land.

"We want to be part of the discussions to make sure that investments continues to be made in this community or begins, or starts to happen in this community," she said.

Duggan says a majority of the buildings on the 15-acre lot will be demolished and then salvaged for parts.

The plant, originally built and operated by the city of Detroit in 1989, was permanently closed in 2019.

Since it opened in 1989, the incinerator cost the city approximately $500 million.

“The presence of this incinerator has been a real pain point for this community because it was another example of a health hazard being placed in a lower-income community of color,” Duggan said in a press release. “We worked hard behind the scenes to get the incinerator shut down, and now residents of this neighborhood will finally be able to say goodbye to it forever.”

He says the electricity will be shut off next week and that he hopes the demolition process will begin in June and be completed within six months.

“Thank God that smell is gone,” said Pastor Barry Randolph.

Briana Rice is Michigan Public's criminal justice reporter. She's focused on what Detroiters need to feel safe and whether they're getting it.