432-Unit High Rise Planned For Grand Rapids

Spire Investment Properties and Krika Development are proposing 432 market-rate apartments at the southern edge of downtown Grand Rapids. The McConnell is a 10-story, 336,835-square-foot development that covers three lots. The two out-of-state investors hope to build a food hall, microbrewery or distillery, an outdoor lot for food trucks and shipping container-retail  stores. The development would spread over three parcels. They have not disclosed the project’s budget. The developers are seeking special land-use approval from the Grand Rapids Planning Commission to sell alcohol, food and retail at the site.

 

Duggan-Targeted Riverfront Apartment In Foreclosure

The former River Plaza Apartments, a rundown apartment building between old Whittier Hotel and Owen Park, has fallen into foreclosure. The two-building property went into foreclosure with Columbia, Maryland-based Enterprise Community Loan Fund Inc. The property, one of 100 similar properties, was targeted by Mayor Mike Duggan to rid the city of blighted buildings. It’s unclear if the administration is still seeking demolition and there is no update on the plans. The foreclosure was scheduled at the end of December but was postponed multiple times; it finally took place in late August. The owner, Kathy Makino-Leipsitz, has until February 25, 2023 to redeem the properties.

 

WeWork Closing Cass Avenue Location

NYSE:WE, the New York City-based coworking space provider has announced that it’s closing its space at 6001 Cass Avenue, effective November 10. According to a WeWork spokesperson, they have two other coworking space locations in the immediate area. Three years ago, the company more than doubled its space at the time, adding the 91,000-square-foot location. The location is one of three in Detroit. The company communicated with tenants that they may be relocated to the Detroit locations downtown.

 

Downtown’s Merchants Building Slated For Redevelopment

Method Development LLC plans to revamp the Merchants Building in Detroit into a 135-room hotel. The $44 million redevelopment plan includes hotel space, and food, beverage and event space, as well as a rooftop bar. The $44 million price tag includes $5.9 million in building acquisition cost, $21.5 million in hard costs and $16.6 million in soft costs. Kraemer Design Group is project’s architect. This hotel would be one of many at varying development stages in and around downtown Detroit. The project is being financed with $16.7 million in equity and $27.3 million in debt.

Detroit City Airport ALP Approved By The FAA

The Federal Aviation Administration has given a thumb’s up to the city of Detroit’s Airport Layout Plan (ALP) for the Coleman A. Young International Airport. The ALP is expected to net about $100 million for airport development over the next 10 years. According to Mayor Duggan, the too-short runway made the airport nonviable. The grants will be used to add new hangars, a control tower, taxiways, and to improve the safety of the existing runway. Plans for the return of the Davis Aerospace Technical High School to the city airport will also be funded. The city previously received $111,000 in state and federal monies to fund plans for the airport, including the ALP.

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Nonprofit Tackles Grand Rapids’ Homelessness Issue

Mel Trotter Ministries is targeting Grand Rapids’ homelessness issue. The city planning commission recently granted approval to the nonprofit’s plans to rezone three industrial lots on Garden St. SE into a planned redevelopment district. Mel Trotter Ministries plans to build a mixed-use tiny home development called Hope Village. It will include 16 detached tiny homes and the redevelopment of a vacant two-story industrial building to add 10 workforce apartments upstairs. The ground level will be used for amenities, social services and offices and space for light industrial tenants. They tiny home will be 240 to 480 square feet. They will be available to tenants who make 20 to 40 percent of the area median income. They will also come with a path to ownership.

Grand Rapids Office Market Continues to Sputter

The Grand Rapids third quarter office market vacancy rate hit 13.1 percent. The vacancy rate has been increasing since the pandemic as employees move between work-from-home and in-office situations. According to the real estate firm JLL, the market will continue its stops and starts for a while to come. Detroit’s General Motors is an example of the trend. The employer requested employees to come in three days a week only to rescind the request when employees pushed back. Grand Rapids suburban and central business district vacancy rates are one of the lowest in the U.S.

 

 

 

Rising Mortgage Rates Continue to Cool Housing Market

According to a report by RE/MAX of Southeastern Michigan, metro Detroit’s home sales were down 20% in September when compared to the previous year. This year’s rising mortgage rates have slowed the home-buying craze that started in the summer of 2020. The average 30-year mortgage rate was 6.66% last week. It was just under 3% a year ago. The average home sale price over the four-county region (Wayne, Oakland, Macomb and Livingston) was 2% higher than a year ago. The slowing market appears to be normalizing things, with buyers making fewer concessions than in the previous year.

Detroit Regional Partnership Aims to Entice Industrial Development

The Detroit Regional Partnership has created the Verified Industrial Properties web portal, a repository for detailed information on sites in an 11-county focus area, including Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Washtenaw and Livingston counties. The partnership views the clearinghouse as a way to get rid of leg work and improve the accessibility of metro Detroit site information. Property owners pay to have their sites listed in the web portal. Civil engineers have vetted nine sites, considering zoning, topography, geological conditions, transportation, wetlands, etc. Another 15 sites are under evaluation.  Some of the sites in process are large and prominent: The former Summit Place Mall property and 500+ acres of Lyon Township land. The partnership says its sites include urban, suburban and rural.

 

 

State Suspends Novi Dealership’s License

The Michigan Department of State has suspended the license for Carvana LLC, located in Novi. Several alleged violations of the Michigan Vehicle Code led to the suspension. The violations were found during an investigation of multiple no-title complaints from consumers. The violations include failure to make application for title and registration within 15 days, fraudulently selling and dealing in vehicles whose title applications and sale documents were destroyed by employees and then accepting the return of the vehicles, failure to maintain odometer records, improperly issuing temporary registrations, failure to supply records for inspection, possession of improper odometer disclosure records, and 127 instances of probation agreement violations. According to MDOS, the continued violations pose an imminent threat to the public’s health, safety and welfare