Cities Rethink Parking Rules
/in Detroit, National, SE Michigan /by Tracy WillisThe city of Ann Arbor recently voted to remove all minimum off-street parking requirements. Detroit is reviewing its zoning code, possibly implementing new rules regarding how many parking spaces are needed for uses like housing, retail and industrial. Both examples are part of a growing trend in Michigan and around the U.S. as cities rethink their parking rules. Complying with Detroit’s parking requirements is a pain and poses a threat to business growth. Some Detroit-area businesses and organizations think the parking minimums are old-fashioned and block the development of vibrant neighborhoods. Others remain skeptical of entirely scrapping all parking minimums.
Revised Fisher Property Plan Approved by Farmington Hills City Council
/in SE Michigan /by Tracy WillisFarmington Hills City Council has approved a revised planned unit development and site plan for a skilled nursing facility and residential units at the St. Vincent and Sarah Fisher Center. The initial plan proposal was denied in October 2021. Optalis Healthcare and Robertson Brothers’ revised plan decreases the number of dwellings on the property. Originally, the plan included 156 townhomes, but now it includes a combined 94 townhomes and detached single family homes. The townhomes will face Inkster Road, and the single family dwellings would back up to the neighborhood west of the property. Optalis also decreased the bed count on the skilled nursing center from 350 to 100.
Jefferson Chalmsers’ Apartment Building Revived
/in Detroit, SE Michigan /by Tracy WillisThe renovated Marlborough Apartments in the Jefferson Chalmers neighborhood have opened. Jefferson East Inc. and its subsidiary, East Jefferson Development Corporation are responsible for the renovation of the 1927 building that houses. 8 unit apartments. They are also renovating another circa 1929 property on the north side of Jefferson. It will have 15 units. According to Mayor Mike Duggan, the second property has stood vacant for 50 years. The two properties will reserve a total of 13 units for tenants with incomes between 50% and 60% of the area median income. The two and three bedroom units will range from $848 to $914 a month.
Pilot Program Pays Storefront Owners to Renovate Upstairs Apartments
/in Detroit /by Tracy WillisSouthwest Detroit Business Association’s pilot program grants $8,500 per unit to renovate apartments above commercial spaces. In an effort to expand the number of affordable homes and apartments for city residents, empty and derelict second-floor units are an untapped market. According to Elaina Peterson, a program analyst on the policy and implementation team for the city’s housing and revitalization department, there could be as many as 12,000 unoccupied apartments above stores and restaurants in Detroit. If they were updated and made livable, they would make a huge impact on the number of affordable apartments as rents and sale prices continue to increase. The program is one part of a $203 million housing plan that intends to create new rental housing, help renters to become homeowners, and improve the quality of existing rental units.
Three Dispensaries and Processing Facility to Open in Grand Rapids
/in Grand Rapids /by Tracy WillisTommy Nafso, former metro Detroit lawyer and state regulator, and Darel Ross, a Grand Rapids entrepreneur, have partnered to open three cannabis dispensaries and a process facility. They will open the first of the three Noxx dispensaries at 2440 28th St. NW in Grand Rapids this month. A soft launch is planned for Aug. 22, along with a grand opening September 10. The second dispensary will open in late September. The processing and dispensing facility will be Noxx’s main production and will open in mid-November. Noxx’s three dispensaries will be the most operated by one company in Grand Rapids. The partners plan to hire 150 employees across the three locations.
Upper Peninsula State Representative Requests AG Investigation
/in Northern Michigan /by Tracy WillisRep. Sara Cambensy, D-Marquette has requested that the Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel investigate an Upper Peninsula development company headed by a Northern Michigan University board member. The firm states that Cambensy’s claims are “meritless and reckless. Cambensy wrote a 13-page letter on July 28, sounding an alarm about a potential conflict of interest and misuse of state and local money in regards to the former Marquette General Hospital.