May 16, 2004
The Muskegon Chronicle
By Dave Alexander
and Robert C. Burns
The owners of the Muskegon Mall property downtown have decided that
many developers are better than one.
That's a dramatic change for the consortium
of Muskegon institutions that own the city's commercial heart.
When they made that decision, they dismissed the developer who
won the bidding for the project in December 2002.
In pursuing this "evolving"
strategy, Downtown Muskegon Development Corp. told Charter Development
LLC of Southfield in late April that it would not be the only
firm to redevelop the 23-acre downtown parcel, according to Muskegon
Downtown Development officials.
Charter has been involved with the
property owners and the city of Muskegon for more than two years,
pursuing a mixed-use residential and commercial redevelopment
project.
Muskegon Mayor Steve Warmington said
Friday the city stands ready to work with any number of developers
and ideas, but is not necessarily in a hurry to refill the vast,
empty space that once was Muskegon's central business district.
"The city commission wants to
make sure we have the right project or projects," Warmington
said. "What we want to do is make sure that what fills that
space is correct for this community for years to come."
The city has designated the former
mall property as a low-tax "Renaissance Zone" in the
hope of attracting new investment there.
The new strategy would thrust Downtown
Muskegon Development into the role of general developer of the
site. The consortium of non-profit institutions will pursue a
mixed-use development that is in concert with the ideas of Imagine
Muskegon, a community-driven downtown design concept group.
Unlike Charter Development, Imagine
Muskegon has been advocating keeping as many old downtown buildings
as possible, even as many of them have disappeared over the past
few months.
Terry MacAllister, the group's co-chairman,
said he was "absolutely delighted" by the change of
direction and the new willingness to consider its ideas.
"I've always stressed that those
buildings establish the height and depth and dimensions of what
our new downtown should look like," he said.
Rather than allowing an outside developer
to come up with a vision for the downtown, the community must
arrive at its own vision, he said, as Imagine Muskegon has tried
to do.
Downtown Muskegon Development has
been working on reestablishing the historic street system of the
downtown. Officials want to formulate a "master plan"
to present to the Muskegon planners and commissioners as well
as interesting various developers to take on parts of the overall
property.
MacAllister said he believes existing
structures like the eight-story Comerica building are perfect
for residential development.
"The residential component is
absolutely critical," he said. MacAllister believes living
in the new downtown "has got to be diverse, and it's got
to be intense."
Downtown Muskegon Development is trying
to drive a community consensus in putting mall property redevelopment
and overall downtown improvement as the No. 1 economic development
priority in the county.
The delay in getting the Charter agreement
with Downtown Muskegon Development and getting Charter to finalize
its plans so they could be submitted to the city has been a problem.
Downtown Muskegon Development's Chris McGuigan said delays were
caused by all three parties.
For example, the "historic"
building debate caused a six-month delay in coming up with a specific
master plan for the property, McGuigan said.
"It is no longer the DMDC's desire
to sell the entire parcel to Charter," McGuigan told The
Chronicle late last week. "We do not think (one developer)
would be in the best interest in the long-term for the project
nor for the community."
Officials at Charter Development were unavailable to comment on
Downtown Muskegon Development's strategy change.
"Charter's work moved the process substantially ... we are
very grateful for the work they've done," McGuigan said.
"They are a high-quality developer."
McGuigan left open the possibility
that Charter again might re-enter the development by working on
a parcel or two.
"The change is that the DMDC is taking an active role in
seeing that this vision happens," said Frank Bednarek, the
former Muskegon County administrator who is now a consultant to
Downtown Muskegon Development. "They will remain the owners
of the 23 acres."
Downtown Muskegon Development is a
consortium of the Community Foundation for Muskegon County, Muskegon
Area Chamber of Commerce and the Paul C. Johnson Foundation, which
purchased the mall property with the assistance of the city of
Muskegon.
The property owner has removed all of the old mall buildings except
the five deemed to have some historic significance. Bednarek said
the purchase of the property and demolition represents an investment
to date of nearly $3 million.
A number of issues have the mall property owners thinking differently
about their development strategy. Community concerns and frustration
at the apparent lack of progress on redevelopment have registered
with Downtown Muskegon Development officials.
"It is disappointing month after
month to see nothing happen," said Ted Fricano at a recent
meeting of the Downtown Muskegon Business owners Group, an advisory
body to the Main Street Initiative of the Neighborhood Investment
Corp. Fricano owns and operates Fricano's Pizza in Muskegon.
"The current downtown business
owners and the community wonder who is moving the Imagine Muskegon
ideas forward," McGuigan said. "We are going to see
this vision through and rebuild our downtown. We are not going
anywhere until it's done.
"It is up to us to connect with the investor groups and make
our vision happen," McGuigan said.
Besides speaking with interested developers,
Downtown Muskegon Development also has been in contact with several
parties interested in redevelopment of the remaining five structures:
The Comerica Bank tower, former National City Bank, old Savings
Bank building, the Daniel's building and the old Century Club.
None of the five structures are occupied
and Downtown Muskegon Development has the ability to take down
the Comerica tower now. With city site plan approval as to what
would replace the other four buildings, they also could be removed.
McGuigan said the Downtown Muskegon Development will pursue negotiations
with interested redevelopment companies on all five structures.
If no redevelopment plan can be found, the buildings would be
removed, McGuigan said.
"We'll satisfy the market," McGuigan said.
Downtown Muskegon Development is in
the process of hiring an urban design firm to complete the downtown
master plan. McGuigan said she could not yet name the design firm.
Most critical in attracting developers
is reestablishing road and utilities. West Western Avenue and
all of its side streets from Third Street to Terrace were removed
in the early 1970s when Muskegon Mall was built.
© 2004 Muskegon Chronicle. Used with
permission
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