Nicole Curtis’ Years-Long Dispute Decided

HGTV star and Lake Orion native Nicole Curtis was awarded the Islandview property she’s been fighting to save. The decision ends a years-long dispute in which Curtis sued the Detroit Land Bank Authority in March to recoup her investment. Her Detroit Renovations LLC purchased the property from a private owner in 2017 for $17,000. The following year, she discovered that the Detroit Land Bank Authority argued that it actually held the title to the property. Once this was discovered, Curtis and the land bank entered negotiations to fix the issue, but talks broke down. After two rulings in favor of the Land Bank, an order awarding the property to Curtis’s company was entered this week.

Investors Continue to Bet on Commercial Real Estate

A year after the start of the pandemic, high-rise office buildings are near vacant, one of every two hotel rooms is unoccupied, and malls continue to struggle. However, by most measures, the U.S. commercial real-estate market is in solid shape. Prices are already rising again, and the number of foreclosures barely increased. The federal government’s efforts to support the economy protected landlords from steep losses. The support won’t last indefinitely, and investors may be in for a rude awakening when it begins to wane.

 

 

Michigan Real Estate News Headlines – May 24, 2021

National

Is housing market demand starting to weaken?

Evictions

“They going to show up and kick me out”: Millions face eviction when moratorium ends

Detroit

These are the cheapest and most expensive areas to buy a home in Michigan

Nonprofits team up for 61-unit Islandview apartment development

HGTV star Nicole Curtis wins fight with Detroit’s land bank over house

Grand Rapids

These are the cheapest and most expensive areas to buy a home in Michigan

Southeast Michigan

These are the cheapest and most expensive areas to buy a home in Michigan

Real Estate Insider: Troy Marriott’s ownership on the line as loan workout sought

Amid COVID pandemic, country life lures metro Detroit homebuyers

Western Michigan

These are the cheapest and most expensive areas to buy a home in Michigan

Northern Michigan

These are the cheapest and most expensive areas to buy a home in Michigan

Outstate

These are the cheapest and most expensive areas to buy a home in Michigan

Weekly Brief – May 17, 2021

The scorching hot residential market is once again the prevailing topic of the mainstream press. And reports of MLS sales confirm that the market remains scorching hot. There has been an onslaught of news about the market since April 1:

West Michigan Real Estate Boom Predicted to Continue

Michigan Realtors Shocked & Awed By Housing Market

Metro Detroit’s Real Estate Market Surges Until Fall

Residential Properties Fly Off The Market

The scorching market is forcing buyers to get creative. And the hot market is dampening the home buying dreams of millennials.

The rising prices are being independently confirmed nationwide by price index increases.

The bottom line is that the housing market in 2021 is unlike any we have seen before. Hold on for a wild summer.

Developers Adding to Auburn Hills Business District

Developers are building about 400 new apartments and nearly 50,000 square feet of office, restaurant, retail and commercial space. The main business district has about $55 million in new buildings that are under construction or recently completed. Interest in increasing more foot traffic and growing a walkable community are driving the developments. The hope is that by providing more residential housing options, people will realize the benefits of living in Auburn Hills.

Sellers Continue to Have the Upper Hand

Sellers continue to have the upper hand in the real estate market. A shortage of homes has contributed to the current state.  In March 2021, the average seller in metro Detroit received 100 percent of the asking price. Often, sellers received well over their asking price. Sellers continue to contend with dozens of offers that include a variety of contingencies and perks. Buyers are in a bind trying to find homes within their price ranges and are often forced to make concessions on things they want.

Oakland County’s Luxury Housing Boom

Oakland county’s luxury housing market is booming. With stronger prices and quicker sales, 70 homes listed at $1 million and higher have gone pending in Oakland County in past 30 days. Post pandemic, buyers are wanting a lifestyle upgrade. Instead of world travel, buyers are sinking their money into their homes. Currently, Birmingham has the highest price per square foot in Michigan.

Lobbyists Push to Ease Gravel Mining Restrictions

Gravel miners and other business groups are pushing to make it easier to open sand and gravel mines in residential areas. Senate Minority Leader, Jim Ananich, is sponsoring a package of bills that a senate committee will consider on Thursday. The bills would take the approval of gravel mining permits away from local governments and give it to the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy (EGLE). Critics say this would result in the dust and noise of gravel operations coming to many Michigan residential neighborhoods.

Bedrock Purchases Stroh River Place Property

Bedrock LLC finalized the purchase of the Stroh River Place property from The Stroh Companies, Inc. The 500,000-square-foot building sits in the Rivertown Warehouse District, east of downtown Detroit. The purchase includes 735 parking spaces and 4.4 acres of undeveloped land. The property sits along the 3.5-mile Detroit Riverwalk and is the company’s second purchase outside of downtown Detroit. The site used to be a manufacturing and research facility. The Stroh Brewery Company purchased the building in 1979 and renovated it.

Michigan Real Estate News Headlines – May 17, 2021

National

Investors Bet on Commercial Real Estate, Undeterred by Empty Offices and Hotel Rooms

Biden’s tax proposal ‘very concerning’ for commercial real estate: Marcus & Millichap CEO

How to Navigate a Hot Housing Market

Evictions

CDC Eviction Moratorium Expires Next Month, Help Available Now

Foreclosure

One-third of people who delayed mortgage payments during COVID-19 used cash for groceries, utilities

Detroit

Real Estate Insider: Here’s what it will cost you to build out an office this year

Dan Gilbert’s Hudson’s Project — an Architectural Marvel or Stairs to Nowhere?

Bedrock buys commercial site on Detroit riverfront

Did New York developer bite off more than he could chew in Detroit?

Middle class growth stagnates in Detroit, Future City report finds

Grand Rapids

New push begins to ease approval of gravel mining in residential areas

Southeast Michigan

Real Estate Insider: Here’s what it will cost you to build out an office this year

United Wholesale Mortgage spending $10 million on sports, community center in Pontiac

New push begins to ease approval of gravel mining in residential areas

Oakland County’s luxury home market booming

Sellers’ market: Ask and you shall receive — more

An Auburn Hills revivial: Main business district sees $55 million in projects and construction

Western Michigan

New push begins to ease approval of gravel mining in residential areas

Northern Michigan

New push begins to ease approval of gravel mining in residential areas

Outstate

New push begins to ease approval of gravel mining in residential areas