Pontiac, Mich., used to have six community centers; now it has none.
"We keep hearing this over and over again, but nobody is working on building new community centers," Coleman Yoakum, executive director of the Webster Perkins Community Center, tells the Detroit Free Press.
"So we'll do that."
The center, which was designed by Chicago architectural firm Fellows and Hamilton, will include 26 classrooms, a kitchen, stage, six skylights, and a large gym.
It will also include a grocery store, a health center, arts programs for the developmentally disabled, a satellite course at Rochester University, and an indoor bus terminal that will offer courses from the Michigan Department of Transportation.
The center will eliminate "a lot of the barriers and surprise struggles a lot of my neighbors live with every day that make getting to these services difficult," Yoakum says.
The center will also offer a community garden, an athletic field, playground, three greenhouses, and a food co-op that will provide cheaper food to low-income Pontiac residents.
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