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Wednesday, December 15,
2004
By Robert C. Burns
CHRONICLE STAFF WRITER
Muskegon officials moved forward Tuesday toward their goal of
resurrecting the city's downtown.
The city commission selected engineers
and environmental consultants for the former Muskegon Mall property,
as well as a contractor to rebuild a downtown portion of Shoreline
Drive.
Fleis & Vandenbrink Engineering
of Muskegon was chosen from among nine bidders for final design
and engineering work on the 23-acre downtown mall site. The firm's
bid came to $151,600, to which $9,800 may be added for design
of a snowmelt system as funds become available.
The city and Downtown
Muskegon Development Corp., the mall property owner, are in the
process of re-establishing streets and sidewalks that existed
before the mall was built in the mid-1970s. The engineering firm
will prepare final drawings and specifications for that, as well
as for rebuilding of underground water and sewer and other utilities,
where necessary.
Engineering and design work is a necessary
step toward the seeking and awarding of construction contracts.
Money for this aspect of the downtown
project will come from part of an enterprise community grant dating
back to 1994. That money had to be committed before a Dec. 20
deadline, said Cathy Brubaker-Clarke, the city's director of economic
and community development, even though the source of funds to
rebuild Western Avenue and several intersecting streets still
has not been nailed down.
Commissioners were assured by City
Engineer Mohammed Al-Shatel that design and engineering work would
not go out of date if street and utility construction did not
begin immediately.
The commission also chose four consulting
firms to work with downtown redevelopers and conduct environmental
investigations in the area, which has been designated as a "Brownfield
Redevelopment District."
They were Horizon Environmental
of Grand Rapids, Prein & Newhof of Muskegon and Grand
Rapids, ERM Inc. of Holland, and Westshore Consulting of Muskegon.
Individual sites will be assigned
to those consulting firms on a round-robin basis as new businesses
show interest in buying new lots in the newly replatted downtown
mall area.
The city has received $1 million in
grants and loans to help investors of mall-area properties perform
environmental studies needed before construction can begin.
Brownfield properties offer investors
state Single Business Tax credits, among other incentives. The
mall area also is a state "Renaissance Zone" which provides
a broad range of tax relief and other incentives for investment.
A Muskegon firm, Jackson-Merkey Contractors,
was picked to rebuild an older portion of Shoreline Drive. It
includes a badly worn portion of road between First and Fourth
streets that was built in 1978, plus a newer portion finished
in 1994 and dubbed Shoreline Drive West, which stretches south
from Fourth to where the highway rejoins Webster Avenue.
Jackson-Merkey was among five bidders
for the job. Its $1,788,462 bid was about $145,000 below the engineer's
estimate, according to Al-Shatel.
The job will make the
old portion compatible with recently completed Shoreline Drive
East, and pave the way for designation of the lakefront highway
as the new U.S. 31 Business Route through downtown Muskegon. After
that, four-lane Muskegon and Webster avenues would go back under
the city's jurisdiction.
© 2004 Muskegon Chronicle. Used
with permission
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