Michigan Locations

Detroiters Tangled Up In Title Transfers

Many Detroiters are dealing with “tangled titles.” They’re in living situations, like inherited homes, where home titles haven’t been transferred from deceased family members. Foreclosure prevention experts often come across title problems where heirs need more education on how to navigate the title transfer problems. Title issues prohibit people from gaining access to assistance programs that help with home repairs or back property taxes. When a home title doesn’t transfer within a family, it cripples families’ abilities to build generational wealth. Title issues occur when there isn’t a will or trust in place. Transferring ownership then has to occur through probate, and that process is out-of-reach for many who can’t afford a lawyer. The stakes grow higher when people are facing tax foreclosure. Michigan Legal Services, a nonprofit legal services organization, has helped over a thousand in Wayne County administer probate cases to transfer title to the heir occupying the home. The need for these services far outweighs the available legal resources.

Fort Ponchartrain Hotel’s Second Tower Plans Revisited

Investor group, Operadora de Servicio Para Hoteles de Lujo, is revisiting the idea of building a second hotel tower on the Fort Pontchartrain hotel in downtown Detroit.  They recently issued a request for proposals for an economic feasibility study fro a 390-room addition to the property. The addition would include 40 for-sale condominiums. There have been plans to build a second tower for the hotel for years. The plans go as far back as 2015. They were abandoned until 2018 when 498 rooms across a 28-story expansion were proposed. At that time, the hotel was called the Crowne Plaza Downtown Detroit Riverfront. At that time, the Detroit City Council called for a neutrality agreement for a labor union to represent hotel workers. In 2021, the hotel’s ownership renamed it Fort Pontchartrain, a Wyndham Hotel, and reopened the Top of the Pontch restaurant.

New District Detroit Development Includes Hotels, Housing, Retail and Offices

Olympia Development and Related Companies have released details about a $1.5 billion development that create housing, retail and hotel properties in the District Detroit.  The plans include 695 mixed-income residential unites, 1.2 million square feet of commercial office space, 100,000 square feet of retail and 467 hotel rooms across 10 downtown Detroit properties. The project will involve constructing six buildings and renovating four buildings. Upon completion, the project is expected to create more than 6,000 jobs and generate more than $500 million in wages annually.

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.

Detroit Developer Revamps Plans For Grand Rapids’ Furniture Company Property

Detroit developer, Sturgeon Bay Partners is revamping its plan for a huge apartment complex southwest of downtown Grand Rapids. The previously announced plan was to convert the historic Sligh Furniture property into a mixed-use development with residential, retail and commercial spaces. The project’s current price tag is at $100 million due to rising construction costs and interest rates. The developer is revising its plans for the concept design and mix of incentives. The original plan was to create a mixed-use devlopment with 753 apartmes, a five-story parking garage and ground-floor retail space.

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.

West Bloomfield Township Board of Trustees Denies Controversial Proposal

The West Bloomfield Township Board of Trustees has denied the controversial proposal to rezone a location known as The Corners property from single-family residential status to a planned development district. The property is located at 2075 Walnut Lake Road on the site of the former Walnut Lake Elementary. The school closed in the mid 90s and was transformed into a multipurpose building. The proposal to rezone met with opposition because it includes a baseball diamond, a playfield and mature trees. The proposal would have enabled the property to be redeveloped into a 101-unit townhome community.

Emagine Is Moving To Walsh College Troy Site

.Emagine Entertainment Inc. is moving its headquarters to the Walsh College campus in Troy. The company has leased the second floor of the college’s facility for three years. The building includes an on-site gym, showers, and conference space. Emagine’s Chariman Paul Glantz hopes the amenities will entice workers to come back tot he office. Emagine has hired several Walsh interns and graduates and hopes the new environment will lead to finding and hiring more talent. The company will make the move in January.

Ann Arbor Attempts To Smooth Building Process For Developers

Real Estate developers have complained for years about Ann Arbor’s many requirements and layers of review and approval for building projects. Some have stated that they’ll never do business in the city again because it’s easier and less costly to build new housing in other places. Ann Arbor officials are trying to right that wrong. The City Council voted to shorten the approval process. Projects that meet the city’s zoning requirements will not have to go through council. Instead, they’ll be reviewed and approved by city staff and the Planning Commission. City leaders are discussing more steps to smooth the process as the city tries to attract high-density development along transit corridors.

Utility Companies Seek Land For Solar Farms

Michigan utility companies are securing real estate to expand their solar energy generation capabilities as consumer demand accelerates. DTE Energy Co. needs 20,000 to 35,000 acres of southern-facing flat land to erect solar arrays over the next 10-15 years. Consumers Energy Co. currently generates 40 megawatts of electricity from solar and plans to be at 8,000 megawatts by 2040. That will require between 40,000-56,000 acres of land. Customer demand and land usage is a balancing act that Lansing policymakers haven’t yet addressed. Industry leaders anticipate some community resistance.

Michigan’s Foreclosure Numbers Highest in the Country

Michigan has the highest number of foreclosures than anywhere in the country, according RealtyTrac. However, experts say this isn’t a sign of a worsening housing market. Michigan’s 2022 January figures represent a 622 percent increase over the totals in January 2021. The big leaps are due to the ending of moratoriums that kept foreclosures from moving forward. Wayne County had the bulk of foreclosure activity, and most of those were old foreclosures that were in the process a long time. According to the vice president of RealtyTrac, Michigan’s backlog is moving faster than in other states. He expects that it could take several months before the backlog is cleared out, but that the figures are not a cause for concern.

Michigan’s Last Kmart Store Has New Owner

The site of Michigan’s last Kmart store near Battle Creek has a new owner. B. Riley Real Estate bought the former Kmart for an undisclosed amount. Prior to the store’s closing, it was a strong retail performer. That, coupled with the future growth of Marshall’s market and the planned Megasite development initiative attracted the buyer. The 86,479 square-foot building is in the Marshall Plaza shopping center and less than three miles away from Marshall Megasite, an industrial development. The developer plans to bring a mix of national retail tenants to the site.

Inflation Impacts Property Taxes With Highest Increase Since 2007

Michigan homeowners can expect to see bigger than normal increases in their summer property tax bills. Thanks to this year’s inflation, many need to prepare for even bigger hikes next year. The inflation rate adjustment for this year’s property taxes is 3.3%, the highest it has been in 15 years. The rate is the maximum increase in taxable value that can apply this year to Michigan homes that haven’t changed ownership or seen additions to the property. The multiplier hasn’t been over 3% since 2007. Inflation’s impact on food and gas prices are obvious to consumers, but its impact on property taxes can be unexpected and somewhat hidden.

Sugar Loaf Demolition Completed But Cloaked in Mystery

Speculation among community residents runs rampant as the new owners of the blighted Sugar Loaf ski lodge complex make good on their promise.  A fence rims the demolition site that is now the staging area for work crews who are crushing the remaining asphalt and making topsoil runs up to the top of what was once the ski hill. Residents are curious about what’s next, but anyone who is in the know isn’t talking. The property was purchased in late 2021 by SPV 45 LLC who said it would remove the blighted buildings and clean up the property.  A real estate advisor for the owners recently attended the annual meeting for townhouse owners who asked many questions. Unfortunately, they didn’t get any answers about the future.

Charlevoix Mansion Garners High Price Tag

A Charlevoix mansion has sold for the enormous price of $9.845 million dollars. According to Interluxe, a luxury real estate marketplace, that price tag is the 5th highest resale price ever for a residential property in Michigan. The lakefront home at 08425 Raspberry Lane in Charlevoix drew more than $205 million in total bids over four days. The  10,000 square foot home designed  by J Bradley Moore & Associates Architects for Frank Macher. It was built in 2009.

Family Video Pivots Once Again

Family Video will close about 60 Michigan locations in the next month. A decline in foot traffic and new movie releases due to COVID-19 has contributed to the closures. However, the owners will still be in the game because they own the underlying real estate. The strategy of purchasing corner properties located in close proximity to neighborhood traffic has made the properties highly desirable for future tenants.

Michigan Mobile Home Owners Feel The Pinch As Lot Rent Increases

Across the U.S., private equity investors are buying up manufactured housing communities and driving up lot rents. Many mobile homeowners have lower or fixed incomes, and increases in rent make it difficult to meet expenses. Older mobile home residents are particularly impacted, often lacking money for adequate food.  A series of Michigan bills could hamper those investors’ actions by creating more protections for mobile homeowners and updating the state’s manufactured housing law. Mobile home ownership is one of the few affordable housing options in rural and urban areas.

Mortgage Demand Dips Past Great Recession Levels

According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, as Washington, D.C.-based industry trade group, the demand for mortgages has dropped lower than any time during the Great Recession over ten years ago. The severe housing shortage continues in Michigan and across the country, limiting the availability of existing homes. Soaring interest rates are also impacting the mortgage market. According to a study from Up for Growth, Michigan is almost 87,000 houses shy of where it should be. Data from Realcomp reveals record-high sale prices in Wayne, Macomb and Oakland counties, as well as in Detroit.

Hotels Offer New Perks To Business Travelers

Hotels are experiencing a revival of leisure travel. This May marked the third consecutive month that U.S. hotel profitability exceeded 2019 levels. However, business travel isn’t rebounding as quickly and isn’t expected to reach pre-pandemic levels until 2024. Detroit and Cincinnati’s markets are experiencing losses close to 23 percent. Larger cities like New York City and Chicago are weathering losses around 50 percent. Hotels are getting creative to encourage business travel by offering “bleisure” perks (business + leisure). They’re offering incentives like co-working spaces with luxury hotel amenities, special access to exclusive local museums, one-on-one exercise training sessions with an Olympic medalist, and welcoming pet policies,