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New Mixed-Use Development Coming to Ferndale

Ferndale’s Rosie O’Grady site is slated for redevelopment. The Ferndale Planning Commission has approved plans for a mixed-use development on the site. It will become the home to an Atlantic and Pacific seafood restaurant, a Mexican barbecue restaurant, office space, and 11 second story apartments. The one or two bedroom perimeter apartments will have balconies along with hot tubs and natural gas fire places. Apartments in the center of the building will have glass walls facing a private courtyard. The apartments are a requirement by the City and the zoning requirements in the Central Business District.

 

 

 

Mystery Buyer Is Snagging Detroit Properties

An unknown entity or entities is purchasing well known Detroit properties. The Film Exchange Building at 2310 Cass Ave. and its parking lot sold for an estimated $8.75 million. The Bookie’s Bar & Grille building at 2208 Cass Ave. sold for an estimated $4.2 million. Both LLC buyers list their addresses as PO boxes, a tactic frequently used by the Illitches who are in talks with Stephen Ross for his Detroit Center for Innovation Project with the University of Michigan. Two other properties at 135 West Montcalm and 231 W. Elizabeth St. have also sold and list a Troy PO box address. All of these properties are within the footprint that Stephen Ross is targeting for his project.

Possible New Location for the Detroit Center for Innovation

 Billionaire Stephen Ross and Christopher Ilitch, president and CEO of Ilitch Holdings, are in talks about building the Detroit Center for Innovation within District Detroit.  District Detroit is comprised of Ilitch-owned properties around Little Caesars Arena. This is a change from previous plans for a 14-acre Gratiot site where the half-built Wayne County jail once stood. The size and scope of the project at the new site is unknown. The project could be in within walking distance of a multifamily residential or mixed-use development that Ross has planned at Charlotte Street and Third Avenue.

Challenges Continue With Traverse City’s New Construction Market

Homeowners who want to build in the Traverse City area are facing hurdles. They need to come with cash, a buildable lot, a contractor with a pool of skilled tradesmen, and then more cash to offset the increase in building materials. There has been a 250% increase in lumber prices. The annual average increase is between 3 and 7 percent. Many construction companies are booked months ahead. Those that are available for work are struggling with supply chain issues. Workforce issues also contribute to construction delays.

Home Furnishing Store Slated for Birmingham

Birmingham’s planning board voted to recommend approval of a final site plan and special land use permit for a building that will house RH, an upscale home furnishings store. Formerly known as Restoration Hardware, the store will be housed in a new four-story building on the southwest corner of Old Woodward Avenue and Brown Street. Buildings on that site, at 300-394 S. Old Woodward Avenue, will be demolished to make room for the 54,000 square-foot building. RH will be an anchor tenant in the building. A restaurant will occupy the top floor.

 

Shipping Companies Find a Home in Romulus

Logistics businesses are moving into Romulus, bringing more than 500 jobs to the area. The Ecorse Commons Industrial Park, near Detroit Metropolitan Airport, houses Hearn Industrial Services, Pitney Bowes, DHL, LaserShip and Lowes Inc. With e-commerce taking off, it joins another million square feet of warehouse space that has been built in Romulus in the past couple of years. The city of Romulus credits the developments to its streamline approach to permits and approvals, as well as the proximity to both Detroit Metro and Willow Run airports.

Justice Department Sends Antitrust Signals

The Justice Department backed out of a proposed settlement with the National Association of Realtors in regards to real-estate agents’ high commissions. Although in the past, the government has brought antitrust cases and then decided to dismiss them, they have never agreed to a proposed settlement and then backed out. There’s speculation that this is a signal from Washington that antitrust enforcers are ready to address the exorbitant brokerage costs that American homeowners pay, often 2 to 3 times higher than the rest of the developed world.

 

Detroit’s AT&T Building Changes Hands

Although public records don’t yet reflect a sale, real estate investment firm, Reign Capital LLC, has bought the AT&T Inc.’s 20-story building. The property was purchased in late May for $15.5 million through an affiliate, Reign CO1 Propco LLC. The company has also recently purchased AT&T properties in Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, and Winston-Salem. An AT&T spokesperson has stated that the change in building ownership will not affect employees or operations.

 

Study Takes Aim at Home-Grown Marijuana Market

Much of Michigan’s marijuana industry is outside mainstream retail outlets. The Michigan Cannabis Manufacturers Association commissioned a study says that millions in taxes and fees could be captured from illicit marijuana markets. While there is no current legislation concerning home cultivation, the information from the study will be used to inform legislators in Lansing. It’s speculated that the MCMA may seek to change the state law passed in 2018 in order to upend the home cultivation rules. The interest is in bulking up the legal retail market and tax revenue.

 

Cannabis Company Opens in Saugatuck Township

The New Standard cannabis company has moved into a newly built retail store in Saugatuck Township. The new site is the company’s 6th dispensary in West Michigan and seventh store across the state.  Located at 6406 Blue Star Highway, it carries more than 275 products for retail and curbside service. The company opened its first location in Hazel Park in April 2020. New Standard recently acquired Agri-Med LLC which was operating three dispensaries in Muskegon, Edmore and Nunica.