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MiBiz Network
Karen Gentry
August
23, 2004
A
New York development company and a Muskegon automotive
tooling supplier were two recipients of recent Single
Business Tax credits from the Michigan Economic Development
Corporation earlier this month.
Brownfield
designations went to Northern Machine Tool Companies
and Triple O Enterprises, and the Watermark Center
and Lofts, developed by ANM of Brooklyn, N.Y.
“Brownfield
redevelopment can be an expensive undertaking for
communities,” said Gov. Jennifer Granholm. “These
tax credits are catalysts for converting once-tainted
and burdensome properties into magnets for economic
growth and jobs.”
Northern
Machine Tool will use an $80,000 credit to help clean
up contaminated property on Henry Street to expand
its facility by approximately 10,000 square feet.
The automotive tooling supplier has been in downtown
Muskegon since 1946. The project is expected to spur
more than $800,000 in private investment and create
up to three new jobs.
“We’re
looking at some equipment purchases,” said Steve
Olsen, president of Northern Machine Tool Companies.
According to Olsen, customers have been asking him
to install equipment that would be more attuned to
the type of work they would like his company to do.
He’s considering purchasing stamping presses
and machine handling equipment.
Developers
will use a $799,042 credit to convert the former Shaw
Walker manufacturing facility on West Western Avenue
into a five-story building that will include 53 condominiums
and 5,000 square feet of retail and commercial space.
The project
is expected to create more than $7.9 million in private
investment and at least 200 new jobs.
Sarah Rooks,
a local project manager and owner’s representative
for Watermark Center and Lofts said the condos have
been attracting a lot of interest from people as far
away as California who are interested in buying a
loft and living in Muskegon.
She told
MiBiz that the one- to three-bedroom condominiums
start at $94,000 and top out at $230,000.
“A
lot of people are looking to downsize,” Rooks
said. She said empty nesters and young professionals
looking to buy their first home have inquired about
the units.
Rooks remarked
that Muskegon residents will be “blown away”
by the interiors of the condominiums, which include
eight-foot windows, exposed brick, hardwood floors,
ceramic tile and stainless steel appliances. Area
residents will be able to take a peek at the condominiums
during the Parade of Homes in Muskegon in September.
The units will be ready for occupancy by the end of
the year.
“Michigan’s
brownfield program has helped to redevelop hundreds
of properties that were once thought untouchable,”
said MEDC President and CEO Don Jakeway. “When
the benefits of brownfield redevelopment are realized,
the community is energized to take on other projects
which were once thought to be too expensive to conquer.”
This article
appeared in the August 23, 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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