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February
16, 2004
Grand Rapids Business Journal
By Mark Sanchez
MUSKEGON — An aging office furniture factory that
lies a short stroll from Heritage Landing on Muskegon Lake soon
will begin a slow transition to the latest setting for urban living.
In renovations that will take years, the first of many phases
to transform the 900,000-square-foot Shaw-Walker complex into
a residential, retail and office center will begin this spring.
The initial phase includes only that portion of the factory that
fronts Hudson Street and Washington Avenue, or about 10 percent
of the 6.9-acre complex.
The factory’s owner, Brooklyn, N.Y.-based ANM Real Estate
and Investment, will initially convert that portion of the structure
into loft apartments and condominiums on the upper four floors,
and retail and office space on the lower level.
The factory’s original entrance lies on Western Avenue,
less than a block from the Hartshorn Marina on Muskegon Lake and
the neighboring YFCA, and two blocks from Heritage Landing.
The firm’s redevelopment plan fits with the trend and popularity
of renovating older buildings in urban areas for residential and
commercial uses, said Frank Bednarek, vice president of development
for Hooker-DeJong Architects & Engineers.
Hooker-DeJong is the Muskegon firm working for ANM Real Estate
and Investment on the project.
The project sits within a recently designated Renaissance Zone
that offers numerous tax incentives.
It also meets the vision outlined in the city of Muskegon master
plan that calls for reuse of old industrial buildings for residential
uses and the transformation of the nearby downtown area into an
arts, entertainment, residential and commercial district.
The Shaw-Walker complex, located across Western Avenue from Muskegon
Lake and about a mile from the heart of a downtown that’s
undergoing revitalization, “offers a really good opportunity
to offer something really different in the Muskegon marketplace,”
Bednarek said.
“There’s really quite a lot to be offered there,”
he said.
The project is the largest and the latest redevelopment involving
a former industrial building near downtown Muskegon.
The Amazon Building and Hartshorn Centre, each located on Western
Avenue, on either side of Shoreline Drive, have both been given
new life in recent years through major renovations.
The four-story Hartshorn Centre along Muskegon Lake is now an
office and retail center, and the Amazon Building was restored
as a commercial/apartment complex.
Hooker-DeJong served as the architect and engineering firm on
the Amazon Building renovation.
The success of that renovation helped to drive the owners of the
Shaw-Walker complex to proceed with their project, Bednarek said.
ANM Real Estate and Investment is presently in the process of
selecting a commercial real estate firm to handle leasing, marketing
and management of the building, he said.
Bednarek anticipates the first phase to take about a year to complete
once work gets underway this spring.
While ANM Real Estate and Investment’s intention is to ultimately
renovate the entire complex for residential and commercial uses,
future phases will depend on market response and demand, he said.
“It’s all market-driven,” Bednarek said. “They’re
very confident the market is here and that’s what they’re
investing here.”
Among the tools the owner has to drive interest in the complex
are the tax incentives available under the Renaissance Zone, which
makes the owner and tenants eligible for breaks in state and local
taxes until 2014.
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