Just a year ago, the quiet pocket of the city between McClellan and Parkview streets was full of latent potential. Anchored by the recently opened art gallery thoughtfully carved out of a vacant church building, Detroit’s Little Village was a nascent cultural destination. But even on an idyllic summer evening, the elegantly landscaped block — developed by local gallerists Library Street Collective — felt relatively subdued, with a stillness penetrated by an occasional thrum of wheels from the neighbourhood’s showpiece skatepark. What a difference a year makes.
In 2025, the return of warm weather was greeted by the energetic din of cocktails, pastries and conversation. Framing the imposing church building, an elegant bar and bakery now fill out the evolving block. While the church was converted into The Shepherd, a marquee art gallery designed by Peterson Rich Office, the surrounding landscape has been reimagined as a civic hub. A striking sculpture garden honouring the late Detroit artist Charles McGee sits alongside the gallery, with a small bed and breakfast and artist residency program housed in the former church refectory. At the heart of the block, the recently opened Father Forgive Me cocktail bar gives the neighbourhood an intuitive social magnet.
Designed by Holly Jonsson Studio with eye-catching custom millwork by Detroit’s own Surfing Cowboy Studio, the welcoming indoor-outdoor space transforms the church’s onetime garage into an all-day hub of activity. Framed by a broad portico and simple garage-style doors, the compact bar opens to the outdoors in warm weather, with tables spilling out into the pedestrian-friendly landscape.
The relaxed, convivial ambiance owes much to the block’s largely car-free public realm. Designed by New York-based OSD, the landscape combines new greenery with a porous urban promenade that pairs gravel with crushed masonry salvaged from nearby demolition projects. It makes for a sinuous underfoot swirl of red and grey, romantically nestled among the elevated berms, hedges and lawns that round out a generous public space.
Just west of Father Forgive Me, Little Village’s BridgeHouse is now home to a new location of popular local bakery Warda. Named for James Beard award-winning pastry chef Warda Bouguettaya, the bakery and café occupies a former home that had been slated for demolition. Meanwhile, the restored and re-imagined house next door is set to welcome a restaurant, with both properties joined by a new communal porch. Designed by local architects Undecorated, the BridgeHouse complex ingeniously scales up a residential vernacular into a civic setting — achieving a similarly unfussy grace as the much-lauded American pavilion at the ongoing Venice Biennale of Architecture.
For Little Village and Library Street Collective, the new openings mark another milestone in a fast-evolving community. A block to the north, the OMA-designed Lantern building is another popular hub — now home to a bar, a clothing store, and a pair of local non-profits, with a cafe set to round out the complex. Further west, a Lorcan O’Herlihy-designed gallery is also set to join the neighbourhood, while the adjacent Stanton Yards marina complex that sits just south of The Shepherd is poised to extend the public realm across bustling Jefferson Avenue and all the way down to the Detroit River.
Father Forgive Me Animates Detroit’s Little Village
The deviously named cocktail bar takes advantage of a generous, pedestrian-oriented public realm to create an intuitive social hub.