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Builders Reuse, Recycle and Repurpose

Bazzani Building Company completed the 730 Leonard Project last year in Grand Rapids. The project is a prime example of adaptive reuse. Renovating existing buildings into new housing is a growing trend. Over the last two years in the U.S., adaptive reuse apartments increased by 25%. Empty office buildings, dilapidated factories, vacant healthcare buildings and old churches have been revamped and repurposed in a sort of nationwide recycling project. In 2020 and 2021, recycling old buildings added 28,000 rentals onto the market. RentCafe predicts that over 77,000 apartments are currently being reprocessed.  The building recycling trend is outpacing new construction.

Washtenaw County Purchases Conservation Property

Washtenaw County’s Parks and Recreation Commission closed on the purchase of  the Maisel property in Northfield Township on December 1. The purchase increases the county’s system of parks and nature preserves by about 220 acres. The $1.44-million conservation purchase will become one of the largest publicly accessible sites in the Ann Arbor area. Ann Arbor’s greenbelt program covered the majority of the purchase price. The land won’t be open to the public immediately, as the park staff determines trail layout and parking access and demands. Kiosks and trail maps also need to be installed. The large size of the park will offer core habitat for wildlife.

 

 

West Michigan Projects Receive Rehabilitation Grants

Multiple projects in West Michigan have received almost $19 million in placemaking and real estate rehab grants from the state. The Right Place, the city of Grand Rapids and city of Muskegon were awarded $18,991,166. Twenty-two grants totaling $83.8 million were approved by the Michigan Strategic Fund board. The grants are part of the Revitalization and Placemaking (RAP) incentive program created to address the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic in Michigan. The program grants up to $5 million per project for real estate rehabilitation and development and up to $1 million per project for public space improvements.  Up to $20 million can go to local or regional partners who develop a coordinated subgrant program.

 

 

Corktown Receives A $50 Million Facelift

The Michigan Department of Transportation and the city of Detroit are co-funding a $50 million renovation of the Corktown neighborhood.  The makeover will include dedicated lanes for autonomous vehicles, raised bike lanes and the removal and repurposing of its red brick pavers. The goal is to tie into Ford Motor Company’s renovation of Michigan Central Station and the vision of creating a connected corridor from Detroit to Ann Arbor. Corktown’s old brick will be removed, restored and reincorporated into other aspects of the roadway’s design. It will be replaced with new red concrete pavers. MDOT will fund $42.7 million, and the city will fund $7.32 million.

 

Historic Downtown Building Changes Hands in $5.9 Million Deal

The historic Merchants Building in downtown Detroit has sold in an off-market deal for $5.9 million.  A party linked to Detroit-based Method Development LLC bought the building last month. Method will share full development plans for the project in the near future. Broadway Merchants LLC bought the building in 1996. The building was listed in 2014 for $4 million, but never traded hands.  Method has been active in other parts of the city, as well.

 

Rehabbed & Ready Program Restores and Refurbishes Detroit Properties

Detroit Land Bank Authority’s Rehabbed & Ready program has refurbished residential properties across Detroit neighborhoods. They typically gut the homes, put thousands of dollars worth of work into them (including new electrical, plumbing, windows and landscaping) and sell them to new buyers. The Land Bank took a loss on some of the homes that had fire damage or asbestos issues, but the home sales lifted the neighborhoods’ home prices. The Land Bank’s goal is to restore existing value into homes. The program has sold nearly 100 homes since 2015 and is expanding over the next three years to restore an additional 200 houses. The goal will continue to be adding residences and raising property values.

 

 

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.

 

 

The Detroit Land Bank Authority Expects to Sell Remaining Properties by 2023

The Detroit Land Bank Authority expects to sell most of its structures by the end of 2023.  The DLBA is responsible for selling vacant homes and lots in the city.  Their focus moving forward will adapt to vacant land sales with the mission to return blighted and vacant properties to productive use.  The Land Bank officials asked the city for $11 million from the general fund for the 2023 fiscal year in order to maintain operations and properties that could be put up for sale.  The DLBA expects to list 5,400 salvageable properties by the end of next year, but needs the money to maintain the properties.

 

Local Officials Upset About Detroit Zoo’s Great Lakes Center for Nature Plans

Clinton Township and Mount Clemens officials are frustrated with the Detroit Zoo and its Great Lakes Center for Nature plans. Four years ago, Detroit Zoo officials announced the facility would be located in Macomb County. However, the zoo is now considering a tract of undeveloped wetlands along Hall Road, adjacent to Macomb Community College’s Center Campus. The Clinton Township Treasurer questions the decision of building the nature center in one of the most heavily populated commercial areas of the county. Two years ago, Clinton Township and the city of Mount Clemens offered Shadyside Park on the banks of the Clinton River at no cost to the zoo, noting that the direct access to Lake St. Clair and its established trails would make it an ideal site. The Clinton Township Commissioner is concerned about the minimal benefits the county is receiving from the Zoo for the 0.1 levied on each taxpayer in the county.

 

 

Rochester Community Schools To sell Historical Administration Building

Rochester Community Schools is selling a 4.43-acre parcel of land and a 133-year old historical building. The RCS Administration Building is a three-story structure that contains 89,716 square feet of gross building area. Purchase proposals must be submitted in writing by 5 p.m. on March 28. The original building was built in 1889. The last renovation of the building took place in 1988. A community committee studied options for the future of the building and its artifacts. The committee determined the process a prospective buyer will follow to bid on the property, and it’s also focused on identifying artifacts for preservation.