Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Detroit Free Press Mower Gang

THE MOWER GANG CLEANS UP DETROIT

Velodrome is 1st success for group of volunteers



By BRIAN KAUFMAN

FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

Walking through a maze of shrub­bery, trees, tires, paint cans and logs the size of wheelbarrows, it was hard to imagine that people raced bicycles there.

“I cannot believe that this has been abandoned in time,” said Tom Nar­done, founder of the Mower Gang. The small group of volunteers was stand­ing on the Dorais Velodrome in north­east Detroit on Friday. The motto on their shirts said it all, “Winning De­troit’s Other Turf War.”

Nardone, looking for volunteer work that was fun, started the Mower Gang to revive unkempt public land in Detroit. This was the group’s first pro­ject.

The goal at the velodrome was sim­ple: clean up the track at Outer Drive and Mound.

But the task seemed daunting. Twenty-some years of abandonment had created a patchwork of flora that covered most of the concrete. With do­nated power tools, the team set to work under a relentless sun.

Slowly but surely, the banked oval began to resemble its former self.

More volunteers showed up, many meeting for the first time. Bicycles be­gan to appear at the track’s edge and scattered under infield trees.

By late afternoon, the velodrome was silent as the Mower Gang reaped its reward.

“I’m super impressed with what they’ve done in just a day,” said Jon Hughes, owner of Downtown Ferndale Bike Shop. His grandfather helped build the velodrome in 1969 and it was the first track that he rode as a child.

He remembers when it bore nation­al and world champions. Now, with a smile on his face, Hughes was riding the oval once again.

The track was ridable for the first time in years. Large cracks made it more suitable for mountain bikes than fine-tuned racing bikes, but this day was about celebrating a forgotten De­troit relic and encouraging public use. “It’s really not about getting some 45-year-old guy a better place to ride his bike,” said Nardone, reflecting on the Mower Gang’s mission.

“It’s more about getting 10-, 12-, 13­year-old kids a better place to spend an afternoon.”

The group’s next project: Aug. 28 at Riverside Park, at the foot of West Grand Boulevard.





See a video of the project




Tom Nardone, 40, of Birmingham, takes a photo of Mike Hulway, 21, of Grosse Pointe as he rides around the velodrome.




Photos by BRIAN KAUFMAN/Detroit Free Press

Mower Gang volunteer Mike Hulway, 21, of Grosse Pointe cuts weeds on the Dorais Velodrome in Detroit on Friday. The velodrome was built in 1969, but has been abandoned. The gang revives public land in Detroit that is no longer mowed or maintained by the city.




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