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Sunday,
September 26, 2004
By Robert
C. Burns
CHRONICLE
STAFF WRITER
Plans for
preparing the site of the former downtown Muskegon
Mall for redevelopment are now established, and so
is its overall cost -- $11,596,187.
A large
part of the effort to rebuild the post-mall downtown
involves re-establishing the street system that was
tiled and roofed over in a federal Urban Renewal project
in the early 1970s.
But there's
a lot more than streets, below-ground water and sewer
lines and new electric, gas, telephone and cable service
in the overall plan.
How about those 50 new streetlights, and those new
snow-melting sidewalks?
There also are such visual niceties
as fountains and sculpture and other publicly displayed
artworks, new landscaping and an outdoor ice skating
rink.
Even the
now-closed downtown parking ramp at Clay Avenue and
First Street figures into the overall scheme of things.
It is in line for $1.25 million worth of upgrades.
Another $500,000 is budgeted toward improvements to
the parking ramp at the Holiday Inn Muskegon Harbor.
Although the multilevel city parking
ramp appears to be here to stay, the Morris Avenue
bus station would be moved to another location.
Another transportation feature involves
a paved bicycle/pedestrian trail connecting the site
to the Lakeshore Trail, which runs along the city's
Muskegon Lake waterfront.
Local officials expect the new streets
and utilities have to be in place before they see
serious purchase offers for the newly subdivided area
known for decades as the central business district.
But it's all included in a new marketing brochure
now being distributed to prospective investors.
Muskegon city officials and the property
owners will be working on designing the basic streets
and utilities this winter, with construction expected
to begin in the spring. All of the public improvements
on the mall site are contingent on securing government
funding.
How to pay for all this depends on
a variety of sources.
As now planned, $3,351,827 would be
federal money funneled through the Michigan Economic
Development Corp.'s newly created "Grow Michigan"
public works project, aimed at helping cities rejuvenate
downtowns.
Wendy Ohst, manager of the county's
department of employment and training and facilities
management, said the county has filed a notice of
intent to use $3.35 million in Community Development
Block Grant funds to help develop the site with new
roads and utilities.
That is the biggest chunk of money
in what is considered the next important step toward
eventual rebirth of the downtown. MEDC and local officials
already have had some discussions to that end, she
said.
Now, if the mall property and surrounding
area meet the requirement as a low- to moderate-income
area and become eligible for funding, the county's
board of commissioners would then be asked to make
a formal application for funds.
"It would help solidify that project and really
move it forward," she said.
Another $3 million is expected to
come through the U.S. Department of Transportation,
with the Michigan Department of Transportation adding
$1 million more.
The city of Muskegon is expected to
furnish $1 million under the plan. It contributed
$450,000 to buy parking areas after mall owner Rick
Perlman in fall 2002 was foreclosed on by the Downtown
Muskegon Development Corporation, the current owners
of the former mall site. The city also will contribute
$150,000 toward design and engineering work, which
will come from an Enterprise Community grant.
Cathy Brubaker-Clarke, the city's
director of community and economic development, said
that is an ideal use of those funds, one reason being
that they must be spent by the end of this year. The
remaining $400,000 of Muskegon's $1 million contribution
would come from future grants.
In addition to those sources, there
is the U.S. Commerce Department's Economic Development
Administration. The downtown project qualifies for
future funding by virtue of its being included in
a Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy.
Erin Kuhn is a senior planner with the West Michigan
Shoreline Regional Development Commission, which compiles
the economic development strategy document. She said
some initial contacts have been made with EDA representatives
about this project, but no formal application for
funding has yet been submitted.
When and if it is, the amount to be
requested will be determined by officials of Downtown
Muskegon Development.
"It is definitely a possibility for funding,"
she said.
The downtown development group estimates
that ultimately, the 17 acres of developable land
will generate construction spending totaling $60 million.
Long before the investments are made
and buildings built, new streets and the utility lines
that run beneath them must be re-established.
Western Avenue -- once the primary
artery through the central business district -- will
be rebuilt between Third and Terrace streets. Also
to be replaced are the intersecting streets of First,
Second and Jefferson between Clay and Morris avenues;
and Market Street from Jefferson to Terrace.
Water main improvements will be made
on each of those streets except Market, while sanitary
sewer upgrades will go in under all streets except
Second.
The overall public works portion of
the project, covering streets, sewer and water lines,
will come to nearly $1.8 million.
To further prime the pump, the city
designated the mall property as a Renaissance Zone,
exempting property owners from virtually all state
and local property taxes. People who choose to reside
in the zone -- and there is a lot of residential development
in the proposal -- don't have to pay property taxes,
and are exempt from state and local income taxes,
whether they own or rent.
And a tax increment financing district
will be formed to "capture" tax revenue
to help recover some costs in the future.
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