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May 12, 2004
The Muskegon Chronicle
By Robert C. Burns
Plans for a downtown Muskegon nightclub
are showing new signs of life.
Peter C. Johnson of
North Muskegon, co-owner of several G & L chili dog
restaurants in the area, and well-known local restaurateur Hobart
Thrasher announced plans for their Kunga Club in the former Brunswick
Lanes at 441 W. Western Avenue nearly a year ago.
"Kunga" is slang for a conga
drum, and after months of silence the drum has started beating
again.
On Tuesday, Johnson was back before the Muskegon City Commission.
After hearing of the latest plans, the commission voted to:
· Transfer a Class C-SDM liquor
license from the former Bill Knapp's restaurant on East Sherman
Boulevard, plus a new dance-entertainment permit and an extra
bar permit.
· Grant an obsolete property
certificate, which would freeze property taxes at their current
level for the next 12 years.
PCJ Enterprises LLC proposes to invest
$800,000 in the building, work that would include new electrical,
plumbing, heating and cooling systems as well as new floors, walls,
ceilings and a new front facade.
According to its application to the
city, construction would begin next January and be completed around
the first of June. Johnson told commissioners, however, that construction
could start earlier than that.
The club would occupy about half of
the building's 9,100 square feet; the other half would be available
for some other commercial or retail use.
A restaurant to be called Red Sage
was to have occupied that space. Harris Hospitality balked at
the high cost of reconstruction and instead opened Pints &
Quarts Pub and Grill in the Park Row Village in Roosevelt Park
last December.
Johnson said he expected that the tax break afforded by the obsolete
property designation would help in landing a tenant for the other
half of the building.
Before plans for the Brunswick building
stalled, the commission had granted a special downtown development
on-premise liquor license for the Johnson/Thrasher nightclub in
late 2002. That license was never approved by the state, however.
Johnson told commissioners the latest
plan will see a combined restaurant and nightclub business.
He said the club/restaurant would
have 25-30 employees, and the other business likely would add
10-15 more for a total of 40.
© 2004 Muskegon Chronicle. Used with
permission
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