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Car Wash Manufacturer to Build New Headquarters

Car wash manufacturer, Tommy Car Wash Systems, is building a new headquarters and manufacturing facility in Holland. The $32.6 million facility will centralize the company’s operations. The expansion site has sat vacant for more than 20 years. The 245,000 square-foot building will house production space, an assembly area, office space and a demonstration center. The project promises to create or preserve 300 new full-time equivalent jobs. The federal New Markets Tax Credit program will enable Tommy Car Wash Systems to provide advancement opportunities with lower levels of education.  Michigan Community Capital, Old National Bank, and Cinnaire are investors in the project. The project should be complete by the summer of 2023.

 

 

Eastland Center Wraps Up Holiday Season and Tenure

Harper Woods’ 60-year old Eastland Center wrapped up its last holiday season. With only two remaining stores, K&G Fashions and Shoppers World, the center is slotted for demolition next year. NorthPoint Development will redevelop the site into a $94.2 million industrial complex. Hudson’s built the center in 1957. Just 20 years ago, it housed nearly 150 stores. Area residents have pleasant memories of the popular after-school hangout. The shift to internet shopping, along with the COVID-19 pandemic, led to the center’s demise. Moody’s has predicted that 20% of the America’s remaining 1,000 malls will close or be repurposed in the next few years.

 

Harper Woods Shopping Mall Proposed for Industrial Development

Harper Woods’ city planning commission is considering a proposal that would turn the struggling Eastland Center shopping mall into a new industrial/warehouse development. NorthPoint Development LLC is asking for a planned unit development that would raze the enclosed mall and build about 1.03 million square feet of industrial/warehouse space across three buildings on the site.  A 514,000 square-foot building would be built on 36 acres of the site. Another 310,000 square feet would be built on 24.1 acres, and 207,000 square feet would be built on 18.8 acres. 15 acres would remain undeveloped.

Weekly Brief – February 1, 2021

This week I want to highlight the upcoming tax appeal season.

Generally in the first weeks of February (sometimes later in Macomb County), property owners will receive a Notice of Assessment in the mail. If you have not received a Notice of Assessment when you expect it, you should immediately contact the assessor’s office in the municipality in which the property is located. Not receiving your Notice of Assessment does not extend any deadlines. It is the property owner’s responsibility to receive the Notice of Assessment.

Once the Notice of Assessment is received, it should be reviewed to confirm it is: (a) accurate; and (b) appropriate. I have an easy guide to reviewing your Notice of Assessment on my tax appeal blog, which can be accessed here.

Most property owners do not understand that, although the Taxable Value is what is used to calculate the tax bill, the Assessed Value/State Equalized Value is what is actually appealed in a tax appeal. In order to reduce an owner’s tax bill, the owner must demonstrate that the Assessed Value should be reduced to an amount less than the Taxable Value. Only then will the tax bill be reduced. The easy “back of the napkin” method for analyzing a tax appeal is to determine whether the property’s market value is less than twice the Taxable Value. In other words, if the Taxable Value is $100,000, the tax bill will only be reduced if an owner can demonstrate the market value is less than $200,000.

Notably, the date of value for a tax appeal is December 31, 2020. This may impact an appeal’s validity, as the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic may not be fully felt until later in 2021. Last year, I wrote a blog post about the impact of COVID-19 on tax appeals, which can be found here.

There are also deadlines that apply to tax appeals. First, for property classified as residential or agricultural, the owner must first appear before the March Board of Review. This is a mandatory requirement to pursue a tax appeal. After receiving the determination of the Board of Review, the owner must then file a Petition before the Michigan Tax Tribunal by July 31.

For property classified as commercial or industrial, the owner is not required to appear before the March Board of Review, although the owner is permitted to appear. The deadline for filing a Petition before the Michigan Tax Tribunal for these properties is May 31.

My law firm is happy to review properties to determine whether a tax appeal is appropriate. If you are interested in such a review, please email me at dnykanen@fnrplc.com.

Air Cargo Is Booming During COVID-19

The Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, also known as CVG,  has 15,000 fewer arrivals and departures since the start of the pandemic. That doesn’t mean their runways are clear. Their air cargo business is booming. Amazon Air is completing a 798,000 square-foot sorting center, a seven-level parking structure, and acres of concrete to accommodate 20 aircraft. The new facility is scheduled to open in the fall. This boom in logistics is impacting industrial development around the country.

Industrial Development Plan in Western Oakland County Heads to City Council for Review

The former Ford Assembly Plant on Wixom Road is the site of a a new redevelopment plan proposed by Flint Development, a Kansas City, Missouri-based company. The plan proposes to construct over 1.5 million square feet of warehouse and industrial space north of the current retail development on the site and promises to create 750 jobs in the first phase. Overall, it’s a $120 million investment.

Weekly Brief – January 11, 2021

I want to highlight a few topics that I believe will dominate the Michigan real estate landscape at a macro level in 2021.

First, mortgage foreclosures will begin to impact the residential market later this year. Although there is the potential for further federal or state moratoria, eventually we will be unable to kick the can further down the road. These foreclosures will begin to place downward pressure on sales prices at the end of 2021 or early 2022, as the foreclosed properties will begin to be marketed for resale.

Second, the impact of COVID-19 on commercial properties will begin to be felt in 2021 as well.

Although it appears the industrial class is weathering the storm quite well, the same cannot be said for retail and office properties.

For retail properties, in addition to the impact of “stay home” orders, you have the continuing trend of online shopping, which only accelerated due to COVID-19. Paradoxically, the decline of the retail sector has contributed to the stability of the industrial sector, as logistics and warehouse uses that support online retailers have thrived during the pandemic.

Major retailers often file for bankruptcy protection in January, after the cold realities of a failed holiday season hit home. This year, I would expect that major retailers, as well as “mom and pop” stores will have to fact reality in early 2021. The “sit-down” restaurant sector will likely also be impacted.

For the office sector, it remains to be seen is whether the impact will be long-lasting. If companies permanently shift work to a remote, or work-from-home, setting, the impact on the office sector could be significant. However, if employers move back to a traditional work setting, 2020 may be a blip on the office sector radar.

Finally, the lifting of eviction moratoria will impact the residential market. Evictions could have a net positive impact on the investor-owned market, as non-paying tenants are shown the literal, and proverbial, door. Or it could merely signal that rental rates will be forced down, impacting investors and overall residential market pricing.

If you would like to track articles on foreclosure and evictions, those articles are specifically tracked on this page of the Michigan Real Estate News website.