DETROIT — When Mayor Mike Duggan announced his plan to run for Michigan governor, he did so from a tower in the iconic but aging Renaissance Center overlooking Detroit.
It's not the same city that Duggan inherited in January 2014.
No longer defined by blocks of vacant houses, empty downtown storefronts, rampant crime and scores of broken streetlights, many believe Detroit is finally experiencing its renaissance.
''I wish he would stay,'' 40-year-old plumber Thomas Millender said of Duggan, who will step down in January after serving three terms as mayor.
''Duggan did a good job from what the city was to how it has been revamped," Millender said from his father's porch in a neighborhood where many homes are dilapidated. Private renovation crews buzzed in and out of once-vacant houses, preparing them for sale.
''There is not any neighborhood in this city that hasn't had blight reduced, that hasn't had street lights on, that hasn't had parks renovated,'' Duggan told The Associated Press.
''We have it going in the right direction, but the next mayor's gonna have to go build on what I do and the following mayor is gonna have to build on that mayor,'' Duggan said. ''It's going to take decades to bring the city all the way back.''
A once broken city