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Multifamily Building Permits At Highest Levels in Decades

The 2021 total of multifamily housing construction building permits in southeast Michigan has exceeded the total for the last 20 years! So far, 1,762 permits have been issued, making 2021 the best year since 1998. Even as the housing market continues to stay hot, many people are more interested in renting. Along with multifamily housing, new home construction is also up. August was the 15th straight month in which more than 300 permits were issued.

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Novel Financing Helps With Inadequate Housing Issues

An inadequate supply of housing is creating problems for businesses and crippling economic development in many communities. As a result, some communities are turning to tax increment financing. Tax increment financing (TIF) enables a developer to regain some of the upfront costs for a project by securing an increase in property taxes for a period of years and diverting them until the spending is repaid. Once the agreed-upon costs are paid off, the higher tax increment goes to local government. TIF has been around for a while but using it to allow new housing to be built that would be affordable to residents is a novel idea. It’s being used where labor and supply costs wouldn’t otherwise allow affordability.

 

 

 

New York Company Steps Up for Dearborn Hotel

An unidentified New York-based company is under contract to buy the former Dearborn Hyatt Regency hotel from the U.S. Marshals Service. Previously, the property was under a $27 million deal that envisioned top-floor condominiums and a hotel on the bottom floors. That deal fell through with the buyer backing out at the end of the inspection period. The current deal is for $17 million. A broker for the sale disputes that figure. The company intends to redevelop the hotel into a mix of 375 market-rate apartments and a small hotel.

Affordable Housing Demand Fills Downtown Muskegon Building

A new TEN21 apartment building in downtown Muskegon is providing affordable housing. Residents began filling the new apartment building last week. The 73-unit building has 60 people waitlisted. The building will be fully occupied by the end of the month. Residents must meet income eligibility rules. One-bedroom rent ranges from $269 to $815 a month, and two bedrooms range from $460 to $950 a month. Each unit is equipped with a washing machine, dryer and kitchen appliances. Community common spaces are included in the development.

 

 

Detroit’s Roosevelt Park Plans Affect Vernor Highway

Detroit has plans for improvements to Roosevelt Park that involve permanently closing a section of Vernor Highway. The plans will make the park safer and uninterrupted by vehicle traffic. Currently, the highway cuts through the park and a section of 15th Street in the Corktown neighborhood.  A temporary closure of the highway at 17th and Newark streets will begin Tuesday. Construction will be completed in 2 phases and is expected to be complete in February 2022. Resident input is welcomed by the city, via a survey that closes on October 31.

Ann Arbor Land Trust Plays Matchmaker

Ann Arbor’s affordable housing crisis has prompted the city to look at creative ways to address the shortage. A retiring U of M real estate professor has started a nonprofit called the Equitable Ann Arbor Land Trust with a goal of creating 1,000-5,000 affordable and market-rate housing units in the next 5-10 years. It’s job would be to match the developer to the project. The land trust would get advance zoning change approvals, site planning, utility taps and other public approvals and negotiate the land sale or lease terms so the site would be “shovel ready.” The advance legwork would help eliminate some of the risk of real estate development. The land trust would earn a fee based on the developed land value from the land owner and possibly earn a long-term partnership interest in the development. The land trust’s revenue would be reinvested in further deals to improve Ann Arbor’s sustainability and affordability concerns. It benefits the city and the developer, too. The city increases its tax revenue, and the developer lowers its risk.

High-Rise Towers Planned for Ann Arbor Lot

The Ann Arbor Housing Commission is finalizing plans that call for a 20-story tower and a 14-story tower buildings. The city is leveraging new tax revenues to build affordable housing that could fund 1,500 new units over the next 20 years. The city’s plans include 370 housing units with a little less than half of them for tenants earning up to 60% of the area median income. The remaining units would be at market rate. The 14-story tower would include 90 rental apartments, and the 20-story tower would include 280 housing units.  The new dwellings will include a mix of studios, one-bedroom and two-bedroom units.

Detroit’s Condo Market Picks Up

Earlier this year, Detroit’s condominium market had 11 months of inventory. Now, it’s down to 7.6 months of inventory, ranging from downtown to areas east, north and west. That promises a healthy supply and demand, albeit probably short-lived. The rising costs of building materials, as much as 50 percent, are driving construction costs up and could threaten to cripple condo development projects. Increases in price may drive future buyers away. Empty nesters and older buyers are gravitating toward luxury condominium purchases, while first-timers or younger buyers are deciding to purchase single-family homes after seeing the high prices of condos.

Proposed Livonia High Rise Apartment Complex Meets Resistance

A proposed apartment complex development south of Wonderland Village in Livonia has neighbors up in arms. At a recent planning commission meeting, several residents spoke out against the project. The site is owned by Livonia-based Schostak Brothers. The request for the property would be to change the zoning from C-2 General Business to R-8 High Rise Residential. Residents have taken issue with the redevelopment of the site for years, but recent concerns include the appropriateness of a high rise apartment complex in the middle of a shopping center development with tenants having visual access into neighborhood backyards. The developer asked the commission to table the proposal to a future date, in order to work on additional details of the development.

Affordable Housing Options Scarce in Michigan

According to a report released by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, a two-bedroom apartment in Michigan is unaffordable for minimum wage renters…unless they work 77 hours a week. Affordable housing was an issue prior to the pandemic, and the economic upheaval has only made it worse. Lawmakers are doling out billions of dollars in emergency rent aid, but experts agree that this is only a short-term fix. Communities need more affordable housing options. With the eviction moratorium expiring, evictions are expected to increase, making it tougher still for displaced tenants to find a place to live. Governor Whitmer plans to use $100 million in federal COVID-19 relief dollars to create 2,000 new affordable rental homes, with funds going toward grants and loans for development, preservation of existing housing and security deposit assistance.