HomeDiagramsDatabaseMapsForum About
     

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > United States > Midwest


Reply

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
     
     
     
     
  #1  
Old Posted Aug 7, 2024, 9:43 PM
deja vu's Avatar
deja vu deja vu is offline
somewhere in-between
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: The Zoo, Michigan
Posts: 3,815
Progress photos (a few weeks old now) of the 11-story Verve Ann Arbor -






Source: LinkedIn | Eisen Group STL
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2024, 1:08 PM
deja vu's Avatar
deja vu deja vu is offline
somewhere in-between
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: The Zoo, Michigan
Posts: 3,815
Verve Ann Arbor - topped out last week at 12 stories. It will feature a rooftop pool and solar panel canopy. Fall leasing started ~ 1 month ago -






Source: LinkedIn | Eisen Group STL




Source: LinkedIn | Subtext

Last edited by deja vu; Sep 28, 2024 at 5:10 PM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2024, 2:47 PM
DetroitMan DetroitMan is offline
Detroiter4life
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Back home in Georgia!
Posts: 4,320
Ann Arbor wants to reimagine Depot Street train station with housing above
Quote:
Fuller Road is out and Depot Street is in as Ann Arbor aims to build a new train station.

And it could be a mixed-use development with housing above, according to the latest idea city leaders are kicking around. After many years of pursuing building a train station in part of Fuller Park in front of the University of Michigan medical complex — a debated concept the federal government didn’t support — city leaders now have their sights set on reimagining the current Amtrak station location on Depot Street. “And in our view, that reimagination needs to be more than just a center where you buy tickets and get on a train,” City Administrator Milton Dohoney said. “We believe that we need to explore the possibility of potentially housing on top of a reimagined ticket center, and vertical development at that site is certainly physically possible.”

What that might look like and who might partner with the city remains to be seen, Dohoney said.

“But if you don’t have a vision, you will always be at a minimal level of growth, and we can’t afford to do that,” he said.

Ann Arbor officials started thinking about the need for a new train station in 2005-2006 while developing the city’s Model for Mobility, and in 2009 City Council voted to move forward with pursuing building a station along Fuller Road.

After over a decade of planning and design, with the feds pushing the city to give further consideration to keeping the station on Depot Street, the city was dealt a blow in 2021 when federal officials balked at the city’s plans, which included potentially over 1,300 car parking spaces in a massive deck along Fuller Road and a price tag that ballooned to $171 million.

The Federal Railroad Administration effectively pulled the plug on the Fuller Road project then, saying it wasn’t interested in giving it further consideration for the foreseeable future.

https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...ousing%20above
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #4  
Old Posted Nov 16, 2024, 2:46 PM
DetroitMan DetroitMan is offline
Detroiter4life
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Back home in Georgia!
Posts: 4,320
Lots of updates over the last 2 weeks.

250-unit affordable housing development breaks ground in Ann Arbor

Quote:
The project team behind the Union at A2, a 250-unit development at 2050 Commerce Blvd., gathered with Ann Arbor officials for a groundbreaking ceremony at the site on Tuesday, Oct. 29. Putting shovels in the dirt, the team celebrated the start of an $82 million project expected to be completed by fall 2026. The Annex Group, a housing developer based in Indianapolis, is behind the project, which is expected to provide a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments designated as affordable for people with incomes up to 70% of the area median.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...ann-arbor.html

Ann Arbor District Library seeks high-rise zoning for downtown library site

Quote:
Ann Arbor District Library leaders have talked for years about the possibility of a high-rise redevelopment of the downtown library site someday.

That could include a new library on the lower levels of a mixed-use building with housing above, according to one 15-story concept explored five years ago. While there is no specific development proposed at this time, the library is now requesting city approval to rezone the three parcels that make up the downtown library property at 343 S. Fifth Ave. and 319-323 E. William St.
“The library is requesting this rezoning to provide more options for the redevelopment of the downtown library site,” states a notice posted on the city website, inviting community members to a citizen participation meeting to learn more.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...rary-site.html

High-rise developer to pay Ann Arbor $124K for park improvements

Quote:
Ann Arbor has finalized a development agreement to allow a 17-story high-rise on South U.

The new building at 1208 South University Ave. will replace the Galleria Mall, longtime home of Pinball Pete’s arcade and other South U businesses.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...rovements.html

Redevelopment could bring 14 new condos to Ann Arbor’s Kerrytown


Quote:
Plans are in the works to convert a prominent Kerrytown commercial complex to residential condos, bringing more housing to downtown Ann Arbor.

The project at 303 Detroit St. would transform the four-story Market Place office and retail complex next to the Farmers Market into 14 residential condos, while retaining two commercial spaces on the lower garden court level, according to plans submitted to the city in October. The plans, which include adding an extra floor to make it a five-story complex, await city Planning Commission approval.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...kerrytown.html

7-story hotel development proposed next to Ann Arbor’s Briarwood Mall

Quote:
A seven-story hotel could be the next new development to change the landscape around Briarwood Mall, an area of Ann Arbor poised for significant transformation.

Missouri-based Drury Development Corp., a builder of hotels under the Drury Hotels brand, submitted a proposal to the city on Nov. 1 seeking zoning variances to support its redevelopment plan for 615 Briarwood Circle.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...wood-mall.html


$104M proposal to build 3 parking decks gets mixed reactions from Ann Arbor officials


Quote:
Ann Arbor is being asked by a private developer to help invest over $104 million to make a roughly 20-acre, mixed-use development happen.

That’s the estimated cost of three public parking decks, including the land, now proposed to be owned and operated by the city as part of the Arbor South development starting at the northeast corner of State Street and Eisenhower Parkway near Briarwood Mall on the city’s south side.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...officials.html

Over 200 affordable apartments proposed as part of Ann Arbor development
Quote:
A public-private partnership could bring about 200 or more affordable housing units to the State Street and Eisenhower Parkway area on Ann Arbor’s south side.

City Council was presented with a five-phase plan for the proposed Arbor South development on Tuesday, Nov. 12, with the first phase being city-owned affordable apartments that would take shape at the northeast corner of the 20-acre development site, along Boardwalk Drive.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...velopment.html
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #5  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2024, 5:25 AM
Velvet_Highground Velvet_Highground is offline
Doc Love 3.0
 
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: Metropolitan Detroit
Posts: 634
Seems like a potential for a new major regional keystone institution considering the partnership with Los Alamos.
__________________
The border between democracy and authoritarianism is the least protected border in the world. - Ivan Krastev
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #6  
Old Posted Dec 25, 2024, 8:59 PM
Velvet_Highground Velvet_Highground is offline
Doc Love 3.0
 
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: Metropolitan Detroit
Posts: 634
I'm very interested to hear more about the U of M and Los Alamos Lab project. With Google rolling out "Willow" its new quantum computing chip it seems a truly massive leap forward in quantum computing has been made.

Implications for are quite terrifying for those not prepared or perhaps all of us as it were. "Quantum computing has the potential to crack cryptographic algorithms that secure cryptocurrencies, exposing private keys used to access crypto funds held in wallets". As for National Security with the exception of the most classified data just about everything would be fair game, gaining passwords, schedules and other private information of highly placed government officials would tell a bad actor a great deal. Following that chain of logic our financial system and key corporate proprietary data could be easily hacked and manipulated.

It's not the end of the world apparently Amazon for example has been planning since 2019 I believe it was to operate securely in a world where quantum technology has proliferated. So at least you can get your package on time and always have a job waiting at a fulfillment center when a bad actor or a rouge state decides to crash our financial market during a major international crisis

All jokes aside that the private sector has started to up armor itself in preparation is a sign that the government has taken this threat seriously and are taking steps to safeguard at least certain sectors of the economy.

As for a regional take the Willow Run to Metro Airport Corridor has long been a desired site to create a concentration of cutting-edge technology. That some of the foremost AI research both civilian and classified if we believe what is being told about the classified facility is to be done here is a big boost for the local and state technological ecosystem. I also think it's kind of cool that the chip that reached the below threshold is called Willow and the facilities are being built next to Willow Run. Neat symmetry harkening back to the massive WW2 technological lead and one of the nation's foremost manufacturing facilities, though it seems coincidental.

Quote:
Quantum computers are inherently "noisy," meaning that, without error-correction technologies, every one in 1,000 qubits — the fundamental building blocks of a quan computer — fails.
Quote:
This high error rate is one of the key barriers to scaling up these machines so they are good enough to perform far better than the fastest supercomputers. This is why research has centered on building quantum computers with better and less error-prone — not simply more — qubits.

Google says its new quantum processing unit (QPU), dubbed "Willow," is the first in the world to achieve results that are "below threshold" — a milestone outlined by computer scientist Peter Shor in a 1995 paper. The team outlined the technology in a study published Dec. 9 in the journal Nature.
Quote:
The Google researchers tested Willow against the random circuit sampling (RCS) benchmark, which is now a standard metric for assessing quantum computing chips. In these tests, Willow performed a computation in under five minutes that would have taken today's fastest supercomputers 10 septillion years. This is close to a quadrillion times longer than the age of the universe.
https://www.livescience.com/technolo...verse-to-crack



Quote:
Los Alamos National Laboratory and the university are partnering on a $1.2-billion project for two centers near Ypsilanti, one for classified activities and another for non-classified artificial intelligence computing and research, university officials announced last week. The facility will house the world’s highest performing computing assets, said Steve Bakkal, a Michigan Economic Development Corporation senior strategist, at the Michigan Strategic Fund Board meeting on Tuesday, Dec. 10.

Bakkal said the investment will also expand the state’s “innovation infrastructure and AI ecosystem.” “They will bring the biggest, baddest, fastest computer in the world, because that’s what they have to have to do in their work to protect us and to protect our citizens here in the United States,” added Chris Kolb, the university’s Vice President for Government Relations.

The $100-million grant comes via the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, according to an announcement from Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. She applauded the investment, saying that the project will create “at least 200 knowledge-economy jobs” with nearly $200,000 plus benefits for full-time employees.

The remainder of the billion-dollar project is funded by $850 million from the university and $300 million from the national laboratory, according to Michigan Strategic Fund documents.

The separate but connected facilities are slated to become fully operational by 2030 with construction starting in 2026, according to the announcement.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...-computer.html


Quote:
The University of Michigan and Los Alamos National Laboratory plan to develop a facility for high-performance computing and AI research designed to enhance the university’s research capabilities in science, energy and national security and create new jobs in southeast Michigan.
The effort, part of a new partnership agreement, builds on a recently established research collaboration between the two institutions. Under the expanded agreement, the laboratory and the university will partner in areas such as artificial intelligence, materials science and advanced manufacturing.

The facility will be located in Washtenaw County and house two computing centers.

One center will support Los Alamos scientists and engineers in conducting research and development focused on critical national security AI challenges. An adjacent academic computing center will enable U-M faculty and students, and university partners from throughout the state, to collaborate with Los Alamos researchers on multidisciplinary research projects.

The academic computing center also will provide U-M and Los Alamos researchers with opportunities to design joint workforce development programs and educational programs for students and trainees.
https://insidehpc.com/2024/12/univ-o...arch-facility/
__________________
The border between democracy and authoritarianism is the least protected border in the world. - Ivan Krastev

Last edited by Velvet_Highground; Dec 25, 2024 at 9:06 PM. Reason: Citations for info described in my introduction
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #7  
Old Posted Dec 28, 2024, 12:02 AM
deja vu's Avatar
deja vu deja vu is offline
somewhere in-between
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: The Zoo, Michigan
Posts: 3,815
(from Facebook)

Quote:
Shelby House is a proposed 8 story mass timber residential building on Ann Arbor’s west side in the W Stadium TC1 zoning district. Designed to infill a small lot while utilizing Cross Laminated Timber as the primary structure. Balconies wrap the building so every resident has two private exterior spaces.


Source: Facebook | Synecdoche
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8  
Old Posted Dec 28, 2024, 10:52 PM
Velvet_Highground Velvet_Highground is offline
Doc Love 3.0
 
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: Metropolitan Detroit
Posts: 634
Seems like the kind of project that A2 could use more of. Not pretty at first glance but there's a subtle quality to lines in the railings an the shape and pattern of the balconies.
__________________
The border between democracy and authoritarianism is the least protected border in the world. - Ivan Krastev
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #9  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2025, 5:46 PM
DetroitMan DetroitMan is offline
Detroiter4life
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Back home in Georgia!
Posts: 4,320
19-story South U high-rise approved for development in Ann Arbor


Quote:
A 19-story high-rise is slated for development along South University Avenue in Ann Arbor.

The city’s Planning Commission voted unanimously Tuesday, March 4, to OK plans for the project at the northeast corner of South U and Church Street and to recommend City Council approve a development agreement requiring a $118,125 developer contribution to the city’s parks fund.

The new high-rise is expected to bring 183 new apartments with 625 beds catering to University of Michigan students, plus 4,332 square feet of new ground-floor retail space.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...ann-arbor.html
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #10  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2025, 4:42 AM
Velvet_Highground Velvet_Highground is offline
Doc Love 3.0
 
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: Metropolitan Detroit
Posts: 634
Ann Arbor seems to be finally feeling like it's grown up a bit if the city and its influence continues to expand that's only a positive for the SE MI region and state.
__________________
The border between democracy and authoritarianism is the least protected border in the world. - Ivan Krastev
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #11  
Old Posted Mar 29, 2025, 8:52 PM
DetroitMan DetroitMan is offline
Detroiter4life
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Back home in Georgia!
Posts: 4,320
Here are some more renderings of the Arbor South project from the city of Ann Arbor website.







Here are also some renderings of the 1440 Plymouth development on the north side of Ann Arbor. It's a 70-unit apartment development.




You can find more projects at this website:
https://engage.a2gov.org/
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #12  
Old Posted May 16, 2025, 4:40 PM
Velvet_Highground Velvet_Highground is offline
Doc Love 3.0
 
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: Metropolitan Detroit
Posts: 634
Interesting .. I don’t hate new urbanism like it feels many do possibly because there’s not a ton of it around me to where it becomes common and soulless. As a tool in the kit sure I’m cool with it as a solution in itself meh.

Not a big fan of the nostalgia vibe you don’t have to force it so much to get a quaint charming feel. But it’s all about execution, location and the future plans for the area some of the cheapest crappiest new urbanist projects can have positive impacts in areas starved for density. While some of the best intentioned well planned projects can fail to live up to expectations due to being an island in a sea of low density on the edge of suburbia.

Can’t just force it but I don’t think this is a bad project.

Vintage 1900s neighborhood to feature ‘affordable’ apartments with pricier homes near Ann Arbor



Quote:
One of the founders of an architectural movement inspired by how neighborhoods were designed in the early 1900s - before the rise of automobile culture - is gearing for a new mixed-use development near Ann Arbor.

Sutherland Square is “shovel ready,” Bob Gibbs, of Birmingham, Mich.-based urban consulting firm Gibbs Planning Group, said. They are fine-tuning architectural designs, figuring out who the builder will be and hope it will break ground later this year.

The “New Urbanism” neighborhood will feature as many as 199 residences ranging from studio apartments to larger homes on about 22.5 acres at 6464 S. State St. south of Textile Road in Pittsfield Township.

Gibbs, who also teaches urban planning at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design, calls New Urbanism “idealistic.”

He said the neighborhoods are designed to house a diverse range of people, a range of income levels and age groups. It will be dense and walkable, with spaces for shops and restaurants, also aimed at being an alternative to suburban sprawl.

“You could have townhouses right across the street from a million-dollar house,” Gibbs said.

He said he plans to build apartment units that are more affordable first. The neighborhood would have a mix of housing types — from cottage homes, lofts, townhouses, apartment units, duplexes, live-work units, and larger family homes.


Quote:
It would also feature shop, restaurant and office spaces, along with a town square and other features.

Pittsfield Township officials approved the project in 2021 on a portion of the Sutherland-Wilson centennial farm property, which was originally settled in the 1830s.
https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor...outputType=amp
__________________
The border between democracy and authoritarianism is the least protected border in the world. - Ivan Krastev
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #13  
Old Posted Dec 8, 2025, 3:19 PM
Michagain Michagain is offline
Ann Arbor, Pale Blue Dot
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan
Posts: 68
Edit: deleted my original rant about tearing down buildings vs repurposing the parking lot for the development across from Delonis. After looking more closely and the renderings they are keeping the historic brick factory facade, so at least that's not lost.

Last edited by Michagain; Dec 8, 2025 at 3:34 PM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #14  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2026, 4:08 PM
Velvet_Highground Velvet_Highground is offline
Doc Love 3.0
 
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: Metropolitan Detroit
Posts: 634
Thanks for the update
__________________
The border between democracy and authoritarianism is the least protected border in the world. - Ivan Krastev
Reply With Quote
     
     
End
 
 
Reply

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > United States > Midwest
Forum Jump



Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 2:33 AM.

     
SkyscraperPage.com - Privacy Statement - Top

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.