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Monday,
November 1, 2004 - MiBizWest
Karen Gentry
MiBiz Network
MUSKEGON - Thanks to a $500,000 grant from the Michigan
Economic Development Corp., Fifth Street in Muskegon
will be re-paved and a new streetscape and walking
path will be put in place. The street is a critical
artery because it links the North Nelson neighborhood
to downtown Muskegon.
The Neighborhood Investment Corp.
will coordinate the grant administered through the
state of Michigan. The grant was awarded as part of
the state's Neighborhood of Choice program, one of
just three grants awarded in that program. The North
Nelson neighborhood covers 25 square blocks from Third
and Eighth streets and Western and Monroe avenues.
The grant will be used to repave a five-block section
of Fifth Street between Western and Monroe avenues.
Some of
the grant monies will also be used for the creation
of Hackley Heritage Trail - a one-foot wide walking
trail of scored concrete. It winds its way from the
Union Depot to an alley by Webster and Clay, connecting
the Monet Garden replica and Hackley Park and more
new gardens. Cathy Brubaker-Clarke, director of community
and economic development for the city of Muskegon
said work on the Fifth Street area is slated to begin
in spring.
The plan also calls for putting in
lights, benches, bike racks, trees and landscaping,
and expansion of a park, according to Jessica Elsey,
the new revitalization manager for NIC.
The sprucing
up of the Fifth Street area is all a part of a plan
to make the neighborhood walkable and livable, while
at the same time improving access to downtown Muskegon’s
amenities such as restaurants, the Frauenthal Center
for the Performing Arts and Muskegon Lake. She said
that downtown business owners should benefit as the
eighborhood becomes a more desirable place to live
and the population increases.
Elsey, a 2001 graduate of Central
Michigan University, worked for NIC through an Americorps
position and for the Muskegon Convention & Visitors
Bureau.
In her new position, Elsey will work
with residents in an effort to boost the historic
neighborhood's image. She is charged with marketing
the neighborhood to real estate agents, facilitating
grants for exterior rehabilitation of homes, creating
a neighborhood identity including a new name for the
neighborhood, creation of a "Downtown Living"
newsletter, media campaigns and neighborhood activities
to boost pride.
"We
want a neighborhood to ultimately appeal to urban
people," Elsey told MiBiz.
NIC hopes to attract young families,
singles and couples who want to live in the historic
neighborhood of homes built primarily from 1890-1910.
"They're really undervalued," Elsey said
of the housing stock.
Currently 40 percent of houses in
the North Nelson neighborhood are owner-occupied but
the Neighborhood Investment Corporation would like
to increase that number. The goal for 2005 is to change
five rental homes to owner-occupied, 10 home conversions
in 2006 and 10 homes in 2007, said NIC Executive Director
Jane Clingman-Scott.
NIC also
owns property on Fifth and Monroe that was formerly
a church. NIC plans to build two spec houses on the
property replicating the style and scope of the housing
stock already there, Clingman-Scott said. She said
the homes will be three and four bedroom, two-story
homes at a selling price of approximately $100,000.
That St. Joe's property alone represents a $1.5 million
investment, according to Clingman-Scott.
COPYRIGHT
2004. MIBIZ NETWORK.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
This article
appeared in the November 1, 2004 issue of MiBiz, read
by upper management executives in West and Southwest
Michigan. Print subscriptions are free to qualified
individuals who do business in West and Southwest
Michigan. For further information about MiBiz Network,
visit www.mibiz.com.
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