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Detroit native Jay Rayford founded urban-development organization RepYourCity and is a respected community leader.
Detroit native Jay Rayford founded urban-development organization RepYourCity and is a respected community leader. (Jake Chessum)

Style Special: Detroit Rising

Spurred by hipster idealism, the former automobile capital of the world is enjoying a post-bankruptcy renaissance. Rents are low, millenials are moving in, and the old neighborhoods are buzzing with potential.

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(Photo: Jake Chessum)

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Detroit is a city of pocket neighborhoods. In Midtown,聽where the store opened in 2013,聽dozens of new businesses have popped up within a three-block radius. There鈥檚 ,聽an offshoot of Phillip Cooley鈥檚 barbecue joint; a farm-to-table restaurant called ; a juice bar started by a group of five sisters; and ,聽an exposed-brick and bare-lightbulb caf茅 offering an extensive beer list and Wednesday night trivia. Other neighborhoods have followed a similar growth pattern. On the same quiet residential block in the West Village neighborhood聽where New York City transplant David Kirby opened his market,聽eight new businesses will be opening within the year. “When I first got here,聽my landlord was so sure I鈥檇 fail that I had to beg him to give me a lease,鈥 says Kirby.

There鈥檚 a powerful energy and sense of optimism among young Detroit residents. Some are launching businesses; others are working on community engagement. They share the belief that reviving the city is a collective endeavor,聽and they gather at various hubs鈥 for coffee,聽 for juice,聽and for kettlebell workouts and 6 a.m. runs鈥攖o connect and support one another. 鈥淒etroit is a marriage of big-city culture and diversity with small-town accountability,鈥 says Cooley. 鈥淲e hope to continue to be diverse and inclusive.鈥

Jenna Zerbo

(Jake Chessum)

Jenna Zerbo,聽a buyer for ,聽one of the city's coolest boutiques,聽in front of Shinola鈥檚 Midtown factory. Founded in 2011,聽the watch,聽bicycle,聽and leather-goods maker has helped revitalize the city鈥檚 reputation as a manufacturing hub. The factory was once an automotive research lab.

On Jenna: Dress by ($750); Cheval bracelet by ($230)

(Jake Chessum)

by Shinola ($525); by LHN Jewelry ($345); Jagged bracelet by ($124)

Jonathan Kung

(Jake Chessum)

Pictured riding in Belle Isle. The Hong Kong native moved to Detroit in 2007 and now runs a pop-up restaurant called ,聽which will eventually occupy a brick-and-mortar space in eastern market. 鈥淚 love how Detroit has the bones of a big city yet feels intimate and close knit,鈥 says Kung. 鈥淲e all have our professional realms,聽we are aware of each other,聽or at least have been drunk in the same room. You can go to on a Sunday and see most of Detroit鈥檚 culinary industry gathered on the same patio.鈥 聽

On Jonathan:听 by J.Press York Street ($425); Commuter 513 jeans by ($88); by Timberland ($170); by J.Crew ($45); ($900) and ($1,950) by Shinola.

David Kirby

(Jake Chessum)

David Kirby outside his shop,聽. The 28-year-old moved to Detroit from New York City in 2013 and opened a Brooklyn-style bodega,聽though he admits he was also following the love of his life. Both pursuits have proved successful.

(Jake Chessum)

On David:听 ($198) and ($135) by Filson; ($65) and ($290) by Jean Shop; his own boots.

Phillip Cooley

(Jake Chessum)

Entrepreneur and philanthropist Phillip Cooley on the back patio of one of his restaurants,聽.听Like a lot of young Michigan natives,聽Cooley spent a long time away from the state,聽but when he came back he took the city by storm. The 37-year-old first opened the popular across the street from a dilapidated train station that had become the poster image for Detroit鈥檚 economic ruin. The place helped refurbish the neighborhood,聽which is now home to Astro Coffee and . Today he owns a number of other restaurants but devotes most of his energy to urban-development projects like ,聽a 30,000 square-foot converted warehouse that provides cheap rent to artists and socially conscious startups.

(Jake Chessum)

On Phillip: by Brooks Brothers Red Fleece ($448); by Rag and Bone ($200); by Simon Miller ($345); by J.Press York Street ($29); by Shinola ($900)

Sebastian Jackson

(Jake Chessum)

Sebastian Jackson at his barbershop,聽the .听

On Sebastian: by Rag and Bone ($220); by Shinola ($800)

Jay Rayford

(Jake Chessum)

Detroit native Jay Rayford in the Corktown neighborhood. The restaurant owner and founder of urban-development organization is a respected community leader. 鈥淭his is a city where what you do actually means something to the betterment of the community,鈥 says Rayford. “If you want to create something, this is the place to do it.”聽

On Jay: University jacket by ($694); by Blk Dnm ($215); by Shinola ($550; shinola.com)

Daniel Caudill

(Jake Chessum)

Shinola creative director Daniel Caudill at the brand's concept store. Not since the 1960s have American timepieces been produced on such a large scale.听

On Daniel: ($120) and ($850) by Shinola; by J.Crew ($25)

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