Michigan real estate news weekly brief

Weekly Brief – March 29

Michigan’s two largest metro areas are exceptionally different.

I had the opportunity to spend time in the Grand Rapids metro area in the past week. Metro Grand Rapids development is reminiscent of the sprawl in metro Detroit in the 1990s through the early 2000s. New subdivisions and neighborhood shopping centers are under construction in many areas of metro Grand Rapids. Grand Rapids remains in a growth and sprawl mode.

The Detroit metro area, on the other hand, has matured in its development. Development in metro Detroit (excluding, perhaps, northern Macomb County and the far western edges of Oakland and Wayne Counties) is infill or reuse. Redevelopment, rather than new development, is the primary project.

Grand Rapids still has plenty of greenfield development. Those developments have the potential to be less expensive to develop, as there is less assemblage to negotiate, and fewer legacy development issues to resolve (such as utility relocation).

Grand Rapids may, in a few decades, have to deal with the reuse and infill development issues that Detroit currently confronts. However, for the time being, development in metro Grand Rapids raises entirely different issues than development in metro Detroit.

Single-Family Zoning Issue Divides Ann Arbor City Council

The Ann Arbor City Council is embroiled in a debate that has turned ugly. The city is poised to end single-family zoning, say several council members. Others disagree. The council voted to make it easier for more than 20,000 homeowners to put up a secondary home. These structures are sometimes known as carriage houses or granny flats. Removing additional single-family zoning restrictions could potentially increase affordable housing and reduce segregation and urban sprawl. However, the council disagrees on how to accomplish this goal, as well as how aggressively to pursue it.

Milford Postpones Rezoning Request

The MIlford Township Planning Commission voted to postpone a rezoning request for the Kensington Ridge housing development. The 851-unit housing development requires the rezoning of 335 acres of property. The property is located at the southwest corner of Maple and Milford roads. Residents expressed traffic flow concerns. The commission will hear the issue again in April following discussions between planners and the applicant concerning density at the north end of the development, changes to the road access to Maple Lakes, and a water supply plan.

J.C. Penney Updates Store Closure List

J.C. Penney has updated its store closure list. The company was one of the largest retailers to apply for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection during the pandemic. It announced that it was closing 242 of its stores in May 2020. Since then, the retailer has delayed the closing of 15 stores that were scheduled to be shuttered in March 2021, extending the closing date into May. In doing so, the company added 18 more stores to its closure list.

Grand Rapids Property Developer Receives Tax Incentives

Chicago-based 3F Properties has received $3.6 million in tax incentives to transform a 3-story vacant industrial building into 173 market-rate apartments. The property is located along Market Avenue SW and will include studio, one bedroom, and two bedroom units. The Grand Rapids development will rent apartments ranging from $975 to $1700.  The project also received a 10-year Obsolete Property Rehabilitation Act incentive valued at $2.9 million.

 

 

Michigan real estate news weekly brief

Weekly Brief – March 22

For your consideration this week:
  1. The death of malls, which I have been discussing all year, has another casualty this week. A receiver will be taking over Partridge Creek Mall in Macomb County. A sale by its lender is likley. The Mall has no anchors and a rotating cast of dining tenants. As discussed previously (perhaps too much), malls are in a death spiral initially caused by online retail but accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
  2. The pandemic claims a major hospitality casualty in Detroit. The Westin Book Cadillac, once the image of Detroit’s resurgence, is headed for foreclosure due to a lack of customers. I expect we may see more hotel failures as we continue the path to normalcy. We recently saw plans for a brand new hotel converting to senior living.
  3. The reinvigoration of Detroit’s neighborhoods continues with a plan for the East Warren/Cadieux area being unveiled. Like many plans in Detroit, investment from the public sector and quasi-public sector anchors the plan. We will know Detroit’s neighborhoods are truly back when private sector investment drives redevelopment.

Times are Changing for U.S. Malls

U.S. malls are reeling as restaurant and retail tenants struggle to stay open for business.  Coresight Research data predicts that a quarter of U.S. malls could close over the next 3 to 5 years. Simon Property Group, America’s biggest mall owner, said that its 2020 fourth-quarter revenue dropped by 24%. However, experts think the Simon Property Group does not stand to be the biggest loser as its more distressed competitors will close their doors. Simon expects to see gains from its new additions of hotels and luxury residences.

Metro Detroit Area Home Buyers Duke It Out

Metro Detroit area home buyers compete in bidding wars for their dream homes. Homes are selling for over the asking price, and properties aren’t on the market for long. Brokers are advising clients to come in with their best offers first or risk losing out in the bidding process. Home tours are hopping with appointments every 15 minutes. In one weekend showing, some homes can receive as many as 22 purchase offers. The length of time a house sits on the market from listing to sold has dropped 34% from 2020. Showings per individual home have almost doubled. 

The CDC Takes Steps to Extend the Eviction Moratorium

The CDC is poised to extend and possibly improve the moratorium on evictions. The eviction moratorium will expire in less than two weeks. The expiration could potentially put over 1 million people out of their homes.  With nearly 10 million Americans behind on their rent, Congress approved over $50 billion for rental assistance. However, the state and local channels have just now opened up the application process. The vast majority of people who need the assistance will not receive it in time should the eviction moratorium be allowed to expire in March.

Plans Resuscitated for Restoration Hardware Flagship Store

The Birmingham planning board will meet on March 24 and review a proposal that revives plans to bring Restoration Hardware to downtown Birmingham.  A new 4-story building is proposed for the southwest corner of Old Woodward Avenue and Brown Street. The site is across the street from the new Daxton Hotel. The current buildings at the site would be demolished. After construction, the site would feature a new 54,000-square-foot building with Restoration Hardware as its anchor tenant. In addition, the development would have a top-floor restaurant and 24-space underground parking.