Metro Saving An Icon Young volunteers clean up vandalized Michigan Central Station in Detroit. Stephanie Steinberg Special to the Jewish News A fter the demolitions of the J.L. Hudson department store and the old Tiger Stadium, few iconic structures remain in downtown Detroit. Michigan Central Station is next on the eradication list, but local teen volunteers — armed with shovels, buckets and a pur- pose — plan on changing that. Two nonprofit organizations, Save Michigan Central and Summer in the City (SITC), have partnered to save the train station from being bulldozed — which the Detroit City Council voted to do at a meeting in April. On May 18, City Council delayed its decision after the station's owner asked for another chance to redevelop the building. Today the station, built in 1913 in the beaux-arts neoclassical style, is known for its appearances in films such as Transformers, The Island and Four Brothers. In its heyday, Central Station was home to one of Detroit's main modes of transportation. After the last train left the station in 1988, people have vandalized the building by coating pillars with graffiti, smashing windows and tearing apart walls. The two groups are working to make the station more presentable by bringing volun- teers throughout the summer to plant flow- ers, clear out the heaps of glass, cement and dirt and remove the graffiti. Since 2002, SITC has brought high school volunteers — many of them Jewish — into Detroit to work on projects such as garden- ing, painting murals, tutoring elementary school kids and demolishing buildings. Ben Falik of Huntington Woods estab- lished the organization with friends when he came home from Columbia University in New York City one summer. Since then, the organization has expanded from 14 volun- teers to about 180 volunteers per day. "We knew it was going to be a big sum- mer," Falik said. "Between the scarcity of summer jobs and — whether we owe it to Obama or the bad economy — people want to get involved." Making A Difference Elizabeth Koltonow, 18, of Beverly Hills has volunteered with SITC the last three sum- mers. Now a sophomore at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Koltonow decided to return this summer because she said the city still needs help. 01. Brooke Isaacs and Lauren Mukamal, both 16 and Matt Gilson, 15, all of Farmington Hills clean an interior room. Teens help clean debris from the train station. "It's important to let people know we still care about Detroit, and we're not letting it fall apart',' she said. Koltonow said she thinks it's awful how the once-busy train station deteriorated to its current status. "I don't know how it could have gotten to this point in 20 years': she said. "It's really sad how people come in, tear it apart, steal scrap metal and spray paint it." First-time SITC volunteers Lauren Mukamal and twins Danielle and Brooke Isaacs, all 16 and from Farmington Hills, spent last Friday filling buckets with debris piled in one of the station's rooms. After two hours of work, Mukamal said the room already looked better than when they had arrived. "There was lots of dirt, fallen bricks and cement everywhere,' she said."It was just a mess:' Danielle added that it's nice to get corn- munity service hours for doing something she likes with friends. Ten Teen Service Staff from Oakland County-based Tamarack Camps volunteered recently with SITC at Phoenix Academy in Detroit, where they painted a mural over graffiti. At the end of the day, they joined the rest of the volunteers at the train station to celebrate at SITC's weekly Friday barbecue. Carly Rosen, 16, of West Bloomfield said she enjoyed painting the school. "I really felt like I was helping out',' she said."It made me have a good feeling inside." Rosen said she thinks it's important groups are trying to save the station because it is "one of the symbols of Detroit." Last Friday was the fourth day volunteers worked at the station. Since then, the two groups have filled four dumpsters and have planted more than 1,000 flowers. John Mohyi, 21, of West Bloomfield is the leader of Save Central Station. He said the ultimate goal is to renovate the site so that it may once again become a fully operating train station. Besides receiving donations from local businesses and residents, Mohyi is working on large donors to sponsor the revitaliza- tion of the building. The Ambassador Bridge Company, which owns the building as well as the Detroit- Windsor Ambassador Bridge, donated all the supplies needed for this project. Falik said SITC — which funds its own projects through donations and is expe- riencing financial difficulties because of the economy — would not have been able to participate at the station without the Ambassador Bridge Company's help. "Summer in the City is $15,000 short of its budget, so staff members are working double duty: leading projects and trying to raise extra money so the program doesn't have to be scaled back': he said. Although there remains a lot of work to be done, Mohyi said he is confident the station will still be standing in the future, mainly because "there are too many powerful people that want to see the station saved:' 111 Stephanie Steinberg, 19, was a 2008 JN Teen2Teen summer intern and will be a sophomore at the University of Michigan. Taking a break outside the vandalized Michigan Central Station in Detroit: Steven Hertzberg, 16, Evan Ruby, 15, Kenny Selander, 14, and Katan Murthy, 16, all of West Bloomfield, and Anna Kemeny, 15, of Bloomfield Hills. Want to donate or get involved in saving Michigan Central Station? Visit www.savemichigancentral.com . To volunteer or donate to Summer in the City, go to www.summerinthecity.com . July 30 2009 A13