Switch Expands Former Steelcase Pyramid Site

The former Steelcase Pyramid site south of Grand Rapids is facing a major expansion. Switch, the Las Vegas-based data storage company, is excavating at the Steelcase Pyramid campus in Gaines Township.  It’s building a 312,000-square-foot building separate from the Pyramid.  The project includes a 1,000-square-foot pump house.  Work on the expansion site began in the spring, with the concrete foundations expected to be poured before the snow flies. The cost of the project, its contractor and completion date have yet to be disclosed. According to Switch’s second-quarter earnings report, it allocated $800,000 toward site preparation.

 

Grand Rapids Planning Commission Approves Plans For Multi-Use Development

The Grand Rapids City Planning Commission approved plans for The McConnell, a 432-unit apartment, restaurant and retail building south of downtown Grand Rapids. The project plans will reuse an existing industrial building in addition to new construction. The commission unanimously approved special land use and optional  plan review requests for the project. The special land use request was for a reduction in required parking, alcohol sales and consumption, live entertainment, banquet functions and outdoor seating. The developers of the project include Chicago-based Krika Development, Boston-based Spire Investment Properties and Suitepeople, based in McLean, Virginia.

 

 

Saugatuck’s Clearbrook Golf Course Has New Owners

The new owners of Saugatuck’s Clearbrook Golf Course have no concrete plans for changes to the course other than small aesthetic amendments like burying overhead power lines. Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins and his wife, Julie, view their purchase as a way to invest in the community and plan to maintain the golf course which has been in place since 1926. The purchase did not include the Grill Room Restaurant. Jim and Candy Jeltema will continue as owners of the restaurant. Although they no longer own the golf course, the Jeltemas will continue to operate it.

 

Metro Detroit Home Builders Hold Pessimistic Outlook for 2023

Interest rates continue to rise. Issues with labor availability, materials costs and supply chain slow downs persist. New construction waiting lists are shrinking because people are priced out of the new homes they had set their sights on. Home builders are mired in pessimism as the industry slows. Detroit builders are shifty to other types of development, including remodeling work, self-storage and multifamily apartments. Builders are normally trying to dig basements and frame houses before winter hits, but that isn’t the case this year. September 2022 saw the lowest number of housing  permits pulled since 2011. Rising interest rates continue to impact the market. In contrast, multifamily permits are having their best year since 1998.

 

Indiana-Based Developer Plans Multifamily Townhome Development in Grand Rapids

Thompson Thrift Residential, based in Terra Haute, Indiana, is planning a 344-unit multifamily luxury townhome rental community in Wyoming, a Grand Rapids suburb. The developer spent $5.4 million on 28.5 acres in July. The development will be comprised of one- to four-bedroom  townhome apartments, some with attached garages and private yards.  The complex will include resort-style common areas including a clubhouse, swimming pool, gym, pickle ball courts and a dog park. Thompson Thrift Residential is motivated by the shortage of multifamily development, ;last year’s double-digit employment growth and the 40% increase in home values that have outpriced many first-time home buyers.

 

Trinity Health Systems Plans Mixed-Use Development in Grand Rapids

Livonia-based Trinity Health System has its sights set on 10 parking lots in downtown Grand Rapids, but it’s not for a new hospital site. They are seeking $19 million in federal funding to convert the lots into a mixed-used development to ease the city’s affordable housing shortage.  Trinity was one of 319 applicants to submit requests to Kent County for a share of the $127 million awarded to the county in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA)  funding. The Kent County Board of Commissioners will most likely finalize its remaining ARPA allocations at a November 14 meeting. Trinity Health is exploring additional funding sources for the project, including Brownfield Redevelopment Authority tax credits, Michigan Community Revitalization Program and Michigan Missing Middle Housing Program funds and a philanthropy and capital allocation from Trinity itself.

 

 

New Amazon Fulfillment Center Opening is Delayed

Detroit’s new fulfillment center opening will be delayed until next year. The 3.8 million-square-foot fulfillment center was originally scheduled to be open by spring of 2022.  It’s being built on the city’s old Michigan State Fairgrounds on Woodward near Eight Mile. Developers faced backlash from community members who expressed concerns about hiring locally and environmental protections at the site. Amazon promised the city to recruit Detroit residents through the Detroit at Work employment program, beginning 5 months ahead of the facility’s opening. According to the city, 100 Detroit residents currently work at the fulfillment center. Recruitment efforts to fill those positions began earlier in 2022. Michigan currently has five Amazon fulfillment centers, one tech hub and seven Whole Foods Market locations.

 

Sterling Heights City Council Approves Lakeside Mall Redevelopment Plan

Following two hours of discussion, the Sterling Heights City Council approved a redevelopment plan that will raze Lakeside Mall.  The proposed Lakeside Town Center project will include 150,000 new square feet of retail and dining space. Miami-based Out of the Box Ventures will tear down the shopping center and replace it with more than 2,800 residential units, and new retail, office and hotel space over the course of 12 years. The project has a $1 billion price tag. A $45 million public bond will be issued to pay for public infrastructure improvements at the site located at Hall and Schoenherr roads.

 

Southfield Center Shopping Mall Struggles To Keep Afloat

The Southland Center shopping mall is struggling. According to New York City-based Trepp LLC, the shopping mall is underwater on its commercial mortgage-backed securities debt (CMBS).  The mall was appraised for $66.9 million in September after it went into special servicing. It owes $64.5 million on its 2012 $78.75 million Barclay’s loan. Rialto Capital Advisors LLC is the special servicer and can determine whether to foreclose on the loan or arrange an agreement or loan modification. Special servicers are appointed upon default of a loan.