River walk continue de se transformer comme un symbole du retour de la ville de Detroit.
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Detroit
is making steady progress in creating a downtown riverfront that is a popular
recreation area, a commercial district and an upscale residential strip.
The
riverfront was mainly an industrial and warehouse district for most of the 19th
and 20th centuries. Now, more than 3 million people a year use the RiverWalk,
the pedestrian/bike path that runs along the river from Belle Isle to Rosa
Parks Boulevard. It’s one of downtown’s most popular attractions.
This
year, several key projects will bolster the upscale housing scene along the
river’s edge. One of those developments is Orleans
Landing, the $65 million, 7.7-acre housing and retail complex being
built one block from the Detroit River. The facility began accepting leases
this month for its 287 apartments. Monthly rent starts at $1,315 for a
one-bedroom. The units will be ready for occupancy this fall.
At
the groundbreaking for the development last year, Mayor Mike Duggan said, “You
get a sense we have fundamentally turned a corner.”
Orleans
Landing is at the corner where the RiverWalk links to the Dequindre Cut
Greenway, another pedestrian/bike path that leads north to the Eastern Market.
The Detroit River is one block away and many apartments, particularly the
$2,995-a-month, two-bedroom town homes, will offer commanding views of river
and city.
The
RiverWalk and the Dequindre Cut were part of the $1 billion that a study
by the Detroit Riverfront Conservancy said was invested in the downtown
riverfront from 2003 to 2013. Another $1 billion of investment is expected by
2023, the study said.
“The
riverfront should be the premier place to live — it’s the most naturally
beautiful,” said Matt Lester, founder and CEO of Princeton Enterprises in
Bloomfield Township. That’s why Princeton recently bought two key pieces of the
massive Stroh River Place, the historical riverfront campus that borders Joseph
Campau. It’s one block east of Orleans Landing.
The
25-acre Stroh River Place was once the headquarters of the Parke-Davis
pharmaceutical company. Part of the campus dates back to the 19th century. It’s
a series of cloistered red-brick buildings. It later became the Stroh Brewery
Co.’s headquarters.
Part
of the facility now includes condominium units. Another is a office and retail
facility that includes the high-end Rattlesnake Club restaurant. Neither the
condominiums nor the 300 River Place building with the restaurant was involved
in the recent sale.
What
Princeton did buy was 500 River Place, which has 301 rental apartments, and
Talon Centre at 100 River Place, which is a 67,000-square-foot office building
along the river. Princeton bought the apartment building from the Detroit
General Retirement System. The Talon Centre building was owned by an entity
affiliated to the owner of Lormax-Stern Development Co. in Birmingham. The
sales prices were not disclosed and have not yet been publicly recorded.
Beyond
the River Place sale, a portion of another upscale riverfront apartment
complex, Riverfront
Towers, was sold in June to a New York firm. Image Capital LLC and
private investors bought two of the three Riverfront Towers for $79.5 million.
The New York firm bought the towers that have a total of 577 rental units. The
third tower, which has condominiums, was not sold.
The
complex next to Joe Louis Arena once counted dignitaries and celebrities such
as Rosa Parks, Coleman A. Young and Aretha Franklin as residents. The new
owners have promised upgrades to the Riverfront Towers, including restoration
of the 77-slip marina that’s been closed for several years.
Image
Capital’s other listed holdings include the CNN building in Washington, D.C.,
and One South Wacker in Chicago.
More
big change is coming for 400 acres of riverfront known as the “east
riverfront.” The city and the nonprofit that oversees the RiverWalk are working
on what will essentially be the road map of how much retail, housing and
infrastructure could be built – and how much open space will be preserved.
The
area being examined stretches from the eastern edge of the General Motors
Renaissance Center to the western border of Gabriel Richard Park, next to Belle
Isle. It includes many public and private spaces such as Chene Park
Amphitheatre, the UAW-GM Center for Human Resources and the empty Uniroyal
site. The latter is one of the former industrial sites the city gained control
of and then cleaned up. It’s now looking for a new life.
On
Tuesday night, hundreds attended a public meeting that showed drafts of plans
in which the riverfront had more parking, buildings, public transportation and
open space.
Detroit
resident Stacey Price was among the attendees at the Michigan Outdoor Adventure
Center, 1801 Atwater, who said they were enthusiastic about the possibilities.
“Every
year now the riverfront just gets better and better, I love it,” Price said.
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