Michigan Real Estate News

Timely  |  Relevant  |  Informative

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.

 

 

Michigan Township Vetoes Solar Farms

Invenergy, a multinational energy company, has offered Washtenaw County farmers $1,100 a year for each acre of land utilized for solar panels. Landowners agreed to the deal, but the township didn’t. Some residents fear electromagnetic radiation. Township officials are disenchanted with the company’s sign up efforts before consulting local government. They’re also skeptical about Invenergy’s promises of boosted tax revenue. Others worry about the aesthetics of the panels and their infringement on hunting land. Bridgewater landowners feel that the deal was turned down based on assumptions and misinformation.