COMPAS (Center of Music & Performing Arts Southwest)
The Center of Music & Performing Arts Southwest (COMPÁS) is a community arts center located in the Springwells Village neighborhood of Detroit, Michigan. It offers year-round arts, recreation, and educational opportunities, with a particular focus on youth and the preservation of Latino heritage. Established in 2007, COMPÁS serves as a cultural hub for Southwest Detroit, providing arts instruction and performance opportunities for residents of all ages.
History
COMPÁS originated in 2007 as a collaborative effort between performing artists within the Southwest Detroit community and the Southwest Detroit Business Association (SDBA).[1] That initial partnership laid the groundwork for an organization committed to artistic expression and cultural enrichment in one of Detroit's most historically significant Latino neighborhoods. The center's founding reflects a broader effort by the SDBA to extend its community development work into arts and culture, recognizing that creative programming and economic development are not separate goals.[2]
The organization is currently housed in a renovated facility within the historic Odd Fellows Building in Springwells Village. The space includes a professional-quality dance studio and additional rooms suited to artistic instruction and rehearsal.[3] The Odd Fellows Building is one of several historic commercial structures in Southwest Detroit that have been adapted to serve community and cultural functions. COMPÁS's programs have grown steadily over the years, expanding across dance, instrumental music, and visual arts disciplines and reaching students from across the Southwest Detroit area.
The relationship between COMPÁS and the SDBA remains central to its operation. The SDBA, which coordinates business and community development across Southwest Detroit, lists COMPÁS as one of its active programs, suggesting COMPÁS functions as a program or initiative within that broader organizational structure rather than as a fully independent nonprofit. Funding sources, grant partnerships, and organizational governance details are not fully detailed in publicly available materials, and the center has not prominently publicized enrollment figures or annual budget information.
Culture
COMPÁS places strong emphasis on celebrating and preserving the Latino heritage of Southwest Detroit.[4] That focus shapes the types of artistic instruction offered, which include dance genres, instrumental music, and visual art forms rooted in the traditions of the Latino community. Programming actively works to connect youth with their cultural background, building a sense of identity through creative practice. Students don't just learn in the classroom. They perform at public events throughout Detroit, carrying that cultural expression into wider community spaces.
The annual Run of the Dead fundraiser is one of COMPÁS's most visible public events, celebrating the Mexican holiday of Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead).[5] The event features ofrendas (altars) created by community leaders, participants wearing traditional attire and face paint, and live entertainment performed by COMPÁS students. It draws participants from across Detroit and introduces audiences outside the Latino community to the traditions of Southwest Detroit's Mexican American residents. Through events like Run of the Dead, the center works to build cultural understanding across the broader city.
COMPÁS students have performed at a range of community and civic events, including the SDBA's Community Investment Breakfast, the Windsor Bridge Authority Community Breakfast, the Havana in the Park Fundraiser, and Detroit Cristo Rey High School's Annual Gala.[6] These performances show what the center has built: a pipeline of young artists who represent their community on public stages. The center's commitment to cultural preservation helps ensure that the artistic traditions of Southwest Detroit's Latino community remain visible and active.
Programs
COMPÁS offers instruction across several artistic disciplines, with programming designed to serve youth as its primary audience while remaining open to community members of all ages. Dance instruction reflects the Latino cultural traditions central to the center's mission, and instrumental music classes give students hands-on experience with performance. Visual arts programming rounds out the creative offerings, giving students multiple avenues for artistic development.
José Ballesteros Lopez, a 12-year-old musician, has been noted as a participant in one of the center's bands, illustrating the age range COMPÁS serves and the level of musical engagement its programs can reach.[7] Local television coverage by WXYZ-TV has highlighted the center's role in providing structured creative outlets for young people in Southwest Detroit, where access to arts programming can be limited by economic and geographic barriers.
The center's student ensembles serve a dual function: they provide performance experience for students and act as cultural ambassadors for the neighborhood at civic and fundraising events across Detroit. The progression from classroom instruction to public performance is built into how COMPÁS structures its programs, giving students a clear path from beginner instruction to stage experience.
Neighborhood
COMPÁS is located in the Springwells Village neighborhood of Southwest Detroit.[8] Springwells Village is a predominantly Latino neighborhood with deep roots in Detroit's Mexican American community. It's one of several contiguous neighborhoods in Southwest Detroit that together form the cultural and commercial heart of the city's Latino population. The area is home to local businesses, murals, community organizations, and a residential fabric that has remained largely intact through decades of urban change elsewhere in the city.
Southwest Detroit more broadly is characterized by its strong ties to Mexican American and broader Latino communities, shaped significantly by immigration patterns dating to the early and mid-twentieth century, when workers were recruited to Detroit's industrial sector. That history gives the area a distinct identity within Detroit, and organizations like COMPÁS are part of how that identity is actively maintained and passed to younger generations. The center's location within Springwells Village is not incidental. It places COMPÁS directly within the community it serves.
Getting There
COMPÁS is located in Southwest Detroit and is accessible via major city roadways. The area is served by the Detroit Department of Transportation (DDOT) bus system, which operates routes throughout Southwest Detroit and connecting neighborhoods. Visitors should consult the DDOT website or a transit planning application for current route information serving the Springwells Village area.
Parking availability in the neighborhood varies by time of day and event schedule. Visitors planning to attend performances or classes are encouraged to arrive with extra time. Additional information on access, scheduling, and parking may be available through the COMPÁS Facebook page[9] or by contacting the center directly through the SDBA.