Property Types

Amway Grand Plaza’s Renovation Completed

The $40 million renovation of the Amway Grand Plaza’s 29-story tower is complete. Renovations began in January 2019 and outfitted the tower with new glass that provides guest rooms and the restaurant, MDRD, with floor-to-ceiling views of the city. Prior to the renovations, the 285 tower rooms had windows that started at knee level. According to the chairman and CEO of Van Andel Institute, the tower’s original glass was at the end of its useful life. The new glass is expected to save 10% in energy costs. The tower’s crown was outfitted with new LED lighting. The hotel was received new metal cladding, a backlit crown logo, and updated balcony rooms.

Bedrock Gives Tour of Book Tower Progress

 On Thursday, Bedrock gave a tour of its renovation progress on the historic Book Tower. The renovations include restoration of the original limestone and masonry facade,  replacing 2,400 period accurate windows, and repurposing former office space into 229 residential units. It will also offer retail, hotel and office space when completed. The $313 million project also includes the 13-story Book Building structure. The development will include retail in the basement and first floor, office space on the second and third floors, and the ROOST Apartment Hotel will occupy floors four to eight, featuring 118 studio, one and two-bedroom units. A rooftop bar and outdoor terrace space are also in the plans.

Sugar Loaf Resort Demolition Is Underway

Excavators have begun demolition of Sugar Loaf Resort in Leelanau County. The demolition should be completed by early January, but questions continue to loom. Who is financing the demolition, and what’s on the horizon for the site? The resort operated from the early 1960s until it closed in 2000 and was a premier winter destination. It had two golf courses, a 144,000-square-foot lodge and hotel, a restaurant, two pools, a 3.500-foot paved airstrip, indoor tennis, 72 townhouses, five chairlifts and a wastewater treatment plant. Ross Satterwhite is a local real estate adviser and the spokesperson for the unknown owners.

Ann Arbor’s Plans for Blighted Site Take Shape

Ann Arbor’s plans for the transformation of a blighted site across from the YMCA are in the works. The SmithGroup presented new drawings to the Planning Commission that show how the Treeline urban trail for pedestrians and cyclists could run through the east side of the site along the railroad tracks. They include a new housing building and courtyard on the west side of the site that would provide a mix of affordable and market-rate housing. The city is trying address many different public interests with this site. The site plans have been changed multiple times. The newest drawings are still not the plan’s final draft.

The Mid Project Faces Another Delay

The Mid project, a four-acre development in Midtown, was scheduled to begin in the third quarter this year. The project is now expected to begin in the second quarter of 2022. A spokesperson for the project said that the delays are due to the impact of the pandemic on the industries and components that support the project. The proposal aims to bring two high-rise buildings and other mixed-use development to the north of Detroit’s Whole Foods Inc. store. The project’s two planned phases will both begin in the second quarter. They will include about 300 co-living units, multifamily residential housing, retail space, and a hotel.

The Housing Market May Be Calming Down

Experts say the housing market is may be approaching normalcy for 2022. Home prices should continue to rise, but the pace of the increase will be slower than the last two years. Buyers will continue to outnumber sellers which means home inventory will remain low.  Jeannette Schneider, president of RE/MAX of Southeastern Michigan predicts that home values will increase 8-10 percent in 2022. Other experts say models suggest that in October 2022, prices will be 12.8 percent higher than the the year before. The going will continue to be rough for first time home owners.