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Gun Lake Tribe Plans Development on U.S. 131

The Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Potawatomi Indians (the Gun Lake Tribe) has begun a six-month planning process for a development on 1,200 acres along U.S. 131 in Allegan County. The tribe has been buying land for years, with most of the acreage between 133rd and 128th avenues on the east side of U.S. 131.  The development could bring retail, housing, health care, manufacturing, entertainment and dining establishments. The tribe and Gun Lake Investements (the tribe’s non-gaming economic development arm) hired St. Charles WBK Engineering to oversee the planning. The planning process will help the tribe evaluate non-gaming opportunities for the site.

 

Trinity Health Systems Plans Mixed-Use Development in Grand Rapids

Livonia-based Trinity Health System has its sights set on 10 parking lots in downtown Grand Rapids, but it’s not for a new hospital site. They are seeking $19 million in federal funding to convert the lots into a mixed-used development to ease the city’s affordable housing shortage.  Trinity was one of 319 applicants to submit requests to Kent County for a share of the $127 million awarded to the county in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA)  funding. The Kent County Board of Commissioners will most likely finalize its remaining ARPA allocations at a November 14 meeting. Trinity Health is exploring additional funding sources for the project, including Brownfield Redevelopment Authority tax credits, Michigan Community Revitalization Program and Michigan Missing Middle Housing Program funds and a philanthropy and capital allocation from Trinity itself.

 

 

Meridian Healthcare To Shrink Its Detroit Office Footprint

Meridian Health is subleasing multiple spaces in downtown Detroit, shrinking its office footprint. 266,000 square feet are up for grabs in One Campus Martius building, and almost 40,000 square feet are available in the One Kennedy Square building. Meridian Health is the state’s largest Medicaid health plan. Meridian’s parent company is reducing its leased space footprint nationwide by 65 percent, which could save them up to $200 million per year. The One Campus Martius sublease would be through the end of 2024. One Campus Martius is owned by Bedrock LLC and Meridian; One Kennedy Square is owned by Redico LLC.

 

 

Downtown Detroit’s Central Business District Rides the Rebound Rollercoaster

Downtown Detroit’s restaurants and businesses continue to ride the return-to-office rollercoaster. While they eagerly welcome the return of office workers and the business they bring, the situation still isn’t stable. GM announced that its salaried workforce would return to the office three days a week by the end of the year. When workers called the company out for the abrupt decision, the company changed its tune, saying its policy wouldn’t be adjusted before 2023. To add to the instability, Meridian Health wants to shed more than 300,000 square feet in One Campus Martius and One Kennedy Square. Detroit’s downtown restaurants and businesses aren’t rebounding in leaps and bounds.

 

Revised Fisher Property Plan Approved by Farmington Hills City Council

Farmington 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.

 

$37 Million Hospice Long-Term Care Facility Coming to Grand Rapids

Beaumont Health and Spectrum System has begun construction on a $27 million long-term care, hospice and dialysis center in Grand Rapids. The facility will span 94,000-square-feet and is expected to be complete by spring 2024. The facility will include 125 beds, as well as art therapy and other therapeutic programs. The new center is replacing the current continuing care facility located on Fuller Avenue. Currently, the Fuller Avenue facility provides post-acute rehab, including care for accident and stroke victims. Those services will move to another property underway on Leffingwell Avenue NE.  All employees of the Fuller Avenue sub-acute rehab and long-term care facility will have the opportunity to transfer to other locations.

 

 

Upper Peninsula State Representative Requests AG Investigation

Rep. 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. 

 

 

Pharmaceutical Company Rises in Grand Rapids

Perrigo, the private label over-the-counter pharmaceutical company, is opening its new North American headquarters in Grand Rapids. The company chose Grand Rapids over Chicago and Miami in hopes of benefitting by joining other health care-focused companies and research facilities in the Grand Rapids area. West Michigan is home to 60,000 health science jobs, 428 health science companies and 83 medical device manufacturers.  This concentration has impacted the community, with doctorate-level jobs at six-figure salaries.