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By Mark Sanchez
MUSKEGON — Securing state assistance provides an additional
spark to efforts to revitalize downtown Muskegon and draw new
investment.
Muskegon is one of three communities
statewide accepted into the Michigan Main Street program, modeled
after the highly successful national initiative in place in more
than 1,700 communities nationwide.
Organizers of Muskegon Main Street will receive a year of intensive
training in best management practices from both the Michigan Economic
Development Corp. and the Main Street National Trust for Historic
Preservation.
Participation in the program will give downtown Muskegon more
visibility and an improved image, both within and outside the
community, as well as create momentum for the revitalization push,
said Steve Vaughn, administrator for Muskegon Radiology’s
downtown offices and chairman of the Muskegon Main Street Advisory
Board.
“Anything like this that is going to kick-start it is just
going to be positive. The biggest thing there is getting the ball
rolling,” Vaughn said. “We’re moving in the
right direction and we will continue moving in that right direction.”
The Neighborhood Development Corp., in a partnership with the
Muskegon Arts and Entertainment District, formed a local Main
Street program in early 2003. The program covers a 10-block area
of downtown Muskegon, along Western Avenue from Seventh Street
and down Third Street to Merrill Avenue, that includes 46 parcels,
42 buildings and 76 organizations and businesses.
The national Main Street program focuses on four key areas to
help revitalize urban business districts: aesthetic design, organization,
promotion and marketing, and economic restructuring. The initiative
is designed to enable downtowns to become more vibrant, attractive
places for businesses to locate and for people to shop and gather
at public events.
Since 1980, communities involved in Main
Street have generated $40.35 in new private investment for every
$1 spent to operate the program, according to the National Main
Street Center. In that time, participating communities have seen
more than $17 billion in new public and private investments, 57,470
new businesses formed, and more than 231,000 jobs created.
The program’s formation locally came after downtown Muskegon
had already drawn millions in new investments and redevelopment
in recent years, most notably the Amazon Building, an old factory
that was turned into an apartment/retail complex, and the pending
development of the Edison Lansing commerce and residential park
on Muskegon Lake.
“The program that you’ve undertaken, I think, is something
so important so you can have the kind of driving momentum you
need to participate in the Main Street program and accomplish
a lot of the goals and objectives that you’ve strategically
set out for yourselves,” MEDC Chief Executive Officer Don
Jakeway said last week during a visit to Muskegon to announce
the designation.
“You have a lot to be proud of here. You have a lot of things
you can build on top of for success,” Jakeway said. “I
look at it as knocking the dominoes over in a very logical sequence
of economic development activity.”
The MEDC also chose Niles and Clare to join the Michigan Main
Street program.
The Muskegon Main Street program will eventually extend to the
now-vacant site of the former Muskegon Mall, Vaughn said.
A downtown development group, after recently parting ways with
a Southfield firm, is still exploring options for redeveloping
the mall site in the heart of downtown.
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