Michigan Locations

Ross Snags $100 Million for DCI Project

Stephen Ross has acquired a $100 million in the state’s next budget for The Detroit Center for Innovation.  The Detroit native is the developer of the project. He previously committed to donating $100 million for the center to be built. With the budget deal being finalized, the center will have $200 million of its predicted $250 million price tag. Ross’ company will construct the center and donate it to the University of Michigan. The 200,000-square-foot building will be part of a three-building campus located on Ilitch-owned land and parking lots west of the Fox Theatre in Detroit.

Deeply Affordable Housing Units Planned for Detroit

Developers Cinnaire Solutions, Woodbridge Neighborhood Development Corp., CHN Housing Partners and Detroit Blight Busters will create nearly 200 new units for at-risk residents. The four new housing projects will created 183 affordable units for residents who earn 60 percent of the area median income ($42,960 for a family of two). The projects will also include 20 market-rate apartments. Old Redford, Midtown, Woodbridge and MorningSide neighborhoods are the site of the new units. They are funded, in part, by $38 million in Low-Income Housing Tax Credits from the state.

Bankhole Thompson Calls Out Bedrock’s Tax Subsidy Grab

According to Bankole Thompson, Detroit needs improvements that will impact the lives of its ordinary residents. The tax breaks for big companies are off the backs of ordinary citizens. Residential poverty still exists because of the lack of initiatives designed to make a difference. The city has given away huge tax subsidies to highly capitalized companies who don’t follow through with concrete plans. This is what’s creating the opposition to Dan Gilbert’s request for $60 million in tax breaks for the Hudson site project. Gilbert has the money to complete the project without a tax break from disenfranchised Detroiters. The author believes the heart of the issue is a civil rights issue. The jobs that are promised during the PR blitz for subsidies often do not materialize. The City Council should use the tax break Gilbert wants for more important quality of life issues.

Grand Rapids Home Prices Continue Their Upward Trend

Grand Rapids median home prices are predicted to grow 6.5% in 2021, mirroring the 6.8% growth between 2019 and 2020.  Younger adults are a driving force behind the trend with the median household income also increasing from $68,703 (2019) to $80,000 (2020).

Evictions are a Looming Reality

The New York Legislature has passed a comprehensive and controversial anti-eviction law. The new law bans tenant evictions for a least another 60 days and offers some foreclosure protection to small business owners, as well as renews tax exemptions for elderly or disabled  homeowners. Critics feel the law goes to far and doesn’t require proof that financial hardships are due to the pandemic or define income limitations to qualify for eviction protection.

Community Builders, a Grand Rapids-based nonprofit, is partnering with the city’s Homeless Outreach Team to coordinate short-term accomodations and support service for the area’s homeless population. The Geographically Targeted Housing Outreach intiative (GTHO) is funded in part by the city of Grand Rapids Emergency Solutions Grants under the federal CARES Act.

A Detroit Free Press investigation discovered gaps in the state’s safety net designed to prevent renters from losing their homes. Although the number of evictions has decreased when compared to 2019 data, 4 factors are crippling the state’s evction protection measures: A lack of comprehensive statewide data, missing key information to track communities that have not received aid, local judges who fail to follow the state Supreme Court order, and landlords who are finding leasing loopholes.

Michigan Downtowns Take A Hit From Remote Work

Downtown businesses have lost a significant percentage of their consumers due to remote work trends. The number of empty commercial real estate sites is preventing the resurgence of downtowns. Owners are creatively repurposing empty sites to adapt to the need for affordable housing, remote employee wifi access, and coworking spaces.

Ann Arbor’s Former Lucky’s Market Is Repurposed

The company, Venue, is bringing a 15-minute neighborhood concept to the former Lucky’s Market space in Ann Arbor. Located at 1919 S. Industrial Highway, Venue is the sister location to Prentice4M, a coworking and co-living space. Venue is slated to open on Friday, August 26, but its coworking space will open on September 1. The 30,000-square-foot location will feature five menus, shared coworking space, a bar, a coffee shop, a market and private office rental space. Venue also hosts a podcast studio, telephone booths and conference rooms. It has partnered with an autonomous vehicle ride-sharing system, as a drop-off and pick-up location for May Mobility’s  A2GO service.

Southeast Michigan’s Housing Market Is Stabilizing

Southeast Michigan’s housing market is becoming more stable. The number of buyers is decreasing due to growing interest rates and high home prices. Sales of homes in southeast Michigan in July were down by almost 20 percent from July of last year. Pending sales are declining rapidly, and properties are sitting longer on the market. According to the Realcomp report, the costs of buying a home is 80 percent more expensive now than three summers ago. Detroit is ahead of the rest of the region for growing housing prices. The median price of a home in Detroit has grown 38 percent since last year, having surpassed $100,000 for the first time in history.

Rocket Mortgage’s Issues Forecasted for Other Mortgage Lenders

Rocket Mortgage’s struggles are evident in the earnings report released Thursday evening by Rocket Companies Inc., and they are not likely to be unique as other mortgage companies face challenges. According to Rocket CFO, Julie Booth, the rise in rates had a big impact on rate and term refinance demand. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate has experience its steepest and fasted rise in 50 years. While drastic, Rocket’s diminished earnings were not surprising. Henry Coffey, an analyst with Wedbush Securities, says the same will most likely be true for United Wholesale Mortgage and Home Point Financial when they report earnings next Tuesday and Thursday. Detroit’s Rocket Mortgage is the nation’s largest mortgage lender, generating a record $351 billion in closed loan volume in 2021.

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Northern Michigan Small Retail Businesses Pivot in Pandemic Times

Two Boyne City small businesses are vacating their store fronts. However, it’s not goodbye. The Outdoor Beerdsman, a retail store, is moving to online sales. The difficulty in securing available workers has pushed the owner toward a virtual storefront that will include a sister company.  The second business, Long Road Distillers, is relocating to Charlevoix and is awaiting its liquor license.

Houghton’s Planning Commission Considers Rezoning Request

Houghton’s planning commission will reconsider a previously approved zoning request to rezone approximately 15.5 acres.  The previous request included a wetlands area. The wetlands area was removed from the earlier request. However, concerns continue to be raised about the land use along the shoreline.

Affordable Housing Becomes Scarce in Traverse City

On May 1, when Governor Gretchen Whitmer signed an exectuive order allowing Michigan’s real estate industry to get back to work, the Traverse City market rocketed. The pent-up high demand for real estate, along with the reconfiguration of social patterns due to remote work created an explosion in real estate demand. However, potential buyers may be priced out of the local market. 

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Lumber prices driving construction costs

Supply Chain Drives Up Home Prices

According to home builders, materials cost increases are driving new construction home prices up, as much as 14%. Lumber price spikes have been dramatic due to mills closing the Pacific northwest and the southeast United States,  tariffs imposed on Canadian softwood lumber, and increased demand for new housing. Builders are not making additional profit; the increase is entirely due to rising materials costs. That, in turn, has caused the price of an average new single-family home to increase by $24,386.

Dead Malls Repurposed In Surprising Ways

Dead malls are the ghost of retail pasts, but they’re being repurposed in creative ways. Amazon is using old mall space as new fulfillment centers. One dead mall has become the new headquarters for Fortnite creator Epic Games. To survive, malls are bringing in non-traditional tenants like bowling alleys, gyms, and grocery stores. Turnover and vacancy are high in mall real estate right now.

Upward Retail Trend Predicted to be Short-Lived

Even with retail businesses taking advantage of cheaper rents and ample space, UBS predicts the upward trend will be short-lived. They estimate that 80,000 retail stores across the country will be closed by 2026.  Online shopping had contributed to the downturn for retail storefronts pre-pandemic. Stimulus dollars and consumers’ focus shifting to goods over services has recently bolstered retail, with store openings outpacing store closings for the first time in years. UBS predicts that retailers that sell office supplies, sporting goods, clothing and accessories will be the hardest hit.