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KSL Capital Partners Expands Its Mackinac Island Profile

KSL Capital Partners  purchased Mackinac Island’s Grand Hotel more than two years ago and is expanding its Mackinac Island footprint. It now owns Bicycle Street Inn and Suites, a collection of 3 boutique hotels on Main Street. They also hold Waterfront North and Waterfront South and the restaurant, Winchester’s Whiskey and Bourbon Room.

 

Fenton’s Red Fox Outfitters Building Proposed For Event Venue

Applicants Chelsie Welch and Core Cunningham of Cruwood Granary have submitted a special land use permit to turn the Red Fox Outfitters building into a special event banquet facility. The Fenton Planning Commission will hold a public hearing on January 27 to consider the permit. If approved, the facility could host events for up to 200 people. The property is located at 234 N Leroy Street in Fenton in the central business district. It’s current use is listed as retail. The applicants are required to show how the plans support the master plan and maintain cohesiveness with the character of the vicinity.

The Grand Hotel Owner Snaps up More Island Properties

KSL Capital Group has purchased three boutique hotel properties and an adjacent restaurant on Mackinac Island for an undisclosed price. The properties include The Bicycle Street Inn, Waterfront Collection North, Waterfront Collection South, and Winchester’s Whiskey and Bourbon Room.  The sale included housing on the island and in St. Ignace for seasonal workers. KSL Capital Group also owns the Grand Hotel. The 3 hotel properties are in the heart of the downtown on the island. KSL Capital Group hopes to potentially provide more job security for seasonal workers who could have the opportunity to work on other properties owned by the group during Mackinac Island’s off-season.

 

 

Weekly Brief – March 22

For your consideration this week:
  1. The death of malls, which I have been discussing all year, has another casualty this week. A receiver will be taking over Partridge Creek Mall in Macomb County. A sale by its lender is likley. The Mall has no anchors and a rotating cast of dining tenants. As discussed previously (perhaps too much), malls are in a death spiral initially caused by online retail but accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
  2. The pandemic claims a major hospitality casualty in Detroit. The Westin Book Cadillac, once the image of Detroit’s resurgence, is headed for foreclosure due to a lack of customers. I expect we may see more hotel failures as we continue the path to normalcy. We recently saw plans for a brand new hotel converting to senior living.
  3. The reinvigoration of Detroit’s neighborhoods continues with a plan for the East Warren/Cadieux area being unveiled. Like many plans in Detroit, investment from the public sector and quasi-public sector anchors the plan. We will know Detroit’s neighborhoods are truly back when private sector investment drives redevelopment.

Weekly Brief – March 15

A few random topics for your consideration this week:
  1. The topic of reuse of no longer desirable real estate is starting to appear more frequently in the media. As I have discussed in several updates, the use of real estate will continue to change as the market desires change. This week, Crain’s discusses the reuse of several sites, including the Holiday Inn in Farmington Hills (discussed here previously), as well as Fairlane Mall (discussed here previously) and Briarwood Mall (also discussed here previously). Watch for reuse of real estate to become a continuing topic as retail and office uses fade.
  2. I am hearing from some individuals who would be in a position to know that the foreclosure “boom” that has been predicted may be a much smaller boom than thought. A combination of governmental assistance, mortgage servicer leniency, and post-COVID economic recovery may make the expected boom more of a small bubble.
  3. The changing desirability of malls is a nationwide issue, and is impacting even one of the most storied and successful urban malls in the country, Water Tower Place in Chicago, which is losing one anchor (Macy’s), and watching a second anchor drastically reduce its footprint (American Girl Place). If Water Tower Place is being this dramatically impacted, perhaps pessimism about even the most successful malls in Michigan is warranted (perhaps even Somerset Collection, the fate of which I discussed previously).

Hard Rock Affiliated Hotel is Coming to Kalamazoo

The former Gibson Mandolin-Guitar Manufacturing site is being redeveloped under the REVERB by Hard Rock brand. Plaza Corp. Realty Advisors, Inc. and Dora Hotel Co. are partnering to bring the new hotel to the site at 225 Parsons St. in Kalamazoo. With a long history of respecting historical elements during  its redevelopments and renovations, Plaza Corp. will maintain some historic parts of the 103-year-old property. The new hotel will include a gym, bar, brewery, restaurant, banquet facility, auditorium and museum. Construction and renovation are expected to be complete in fall 2023.

Weekly Brief – March 1, 2021

This week’s discussion is about change. Although it is hopelessly cliche, the only constant in the real estate marketplace is change.

In past weeks, I have discussed the change that will be caused by the decline of bricks and mortar retail (especially malls), the rise of cannabis-related uses, the decline of video stores, and the long-term impact of electric and autonomous vehicles.

This week brings several stories about further changes. In Farmington Hills, we see a brand new hotel development quickly pivoting to senior housing. Also in Farmington Hills, we see vacant industrial space being redeveloped into multifamily housing.

At the national level, we see L Brands shifting its Bath & Body Works store mix away from mall locations. L Brands is also continuing to see its store count for Victoria’s Secret, another mall retailer, decline. And near Kalamazoo, we have another mall that is about to fail. All of these mall locations will be the subject of reuse.

Change is constant in real estate.

 

Farmington Hills Hotel Pivots Due To The Pandemic

The Farmington Hills’ Holiday Inn and Suites, NW Detroit, is shifting its focus. Due to the pandemic, hospitality and restaurants have taken a beating. Southfield-based Group 10 Management is converting the hotel (which was opened in 2018) into senior independent living quarters. 76 apartment units would be created from 133 hotel rooms in the current hotel layout. The company has kept two other properties in the same location open as hotels as there is a need for extended-stay facilities.

Old Detroit Lions Offices Make Way for Godfrey Hotel

The old Detroit Lions’ administrative offices, located at in Detroit’s Corktown neighborhood on Michigan Avenue, will be demolished to make way for a Godfrey Hotel. The 227-room, $74 million project will be the 5th Godfrey Hotel in the country. The hotel will contain a restaurant, bar, ballroom, and rooftop café. Construction is expected to take 18 to 20 months and is a joint venture of Oxford Capital Group and Hunter Pasteur Homes.