The best place for a live printing station is not always the biggest room. It is the place where the line helps the event: visible enough to draw attention, organized enough to move, and close enough to the main action that guests want to join.
Start with the event type
If the goal is lead capture, a convention floor or sponsor lounge near Huntington Place is usually right. If the goal is social content, a retail pop-up, rooftop, patio, or launch party can work better. If the goal is guest gifting, keep the station near check-in, cocktail hour, or the exit path.
Detroit areas to consider
- Downtown & Huntington Place - Conventions, hotels, and corporate events.
- Corktown - Creative venues and brand nights.
- Midtown - Cultural and university events.
- Eastern Market - Warehouse venues and activations.
- Royal Oak & Ferndale - Suburban nightlife and parties.
- Dearborn - Auto-industry and corporate events.
Venue requirements
Most rooms work if they can provide a 10x10 area, standard power, level floor, and a queue path that does not block doors or service lanes. Outdoor setups need weather cover and a clean plan for wind, heat, and blank inventory.
Quick check: if the venue has space for a merch table plus a short line, it probably has space for live printing. Send us the floor plan and we will flag any power, load-in, or queue issues before quoting.
For next steps, review venue requirements, convention booth setup, and send the event details.
Detroit proof
Local proof before the presses roll in
For Detroit, the page you are reading is planned around real venue constraints, not a generic merch table. We map the nearest load-in, the available power, the line path, and the point where guests choose garments before they reach the press. That planning is what keeps the station looking sharp at Huntington Place, a Downtown & Huntington Place private event, or a smaller activation near Little Caesars Arena.
Merch Troop is based in Fullerton and travels with the same live-event production kit: presses, flash dryers, heat presses, blanks, folding tables, signage, and trained printers. A standard station needs roughly 10x10 ft and two 120V circuits, and a two-press setup can clear 100+ shirts per hour when the design menu is simple.