2937 E. Grand Blvd.

Chroma Coworking

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Milwaukee Junction | Starting at $150 /month | BUILT IN 1913 / 2020

Chroma Coworking propels creativity and productivity through inspired environments and state-of-the-art technology that support new workplace models, budding entrepreneurs, and those needing a home away from home.

Find your ideal space with a virtual membership starting at $50/month, a hot desk membership starting at $175/month, a dedicated desk membership starting at $300/month, or a private office membership starting at $650/month. Amenities include receptionist service, furnished offices, high-speed WiFi, meeting rooms, printing & coping, mail service, 24/7 access, and free coffee and tea.

Take inspiration from Chroma’s spectacular views both inside and out. Floor-to-ceiling windows showcase 360-degree city views while exposed ceilings, brick walls, martini columns, and mezzanine add historic character and purpose.Located in the historic Milwaukee Junction neighborhood, Chroma is easy to access from major expressways, has abundant onsite parking, and is close to exceptional coffee shops, bars, and restaurants ranging from casual to fine dining.

Allison Dumas
313 816 1280
info@chromadetroit.city

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2937 E. Grand Blvd.

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$26/SF Gross + Electric | 1,500 – 32,000 SF SQUARE FEET | BUILT IN 1913 / 2020

Chroma is a visionary new development celebrating creativity, collaboration, and community in historic Milwaukee Junction. With its mix of traditional office, coworking, and event spaces, the nine-story building featuring the “Girl with the D Earring” is making an impact in a neighborhood where scores of new restaurants, businesses, and residential developments are emerging.

Fully renovated and modernized, Chroma offers flexible, open, light-filled floors with incredible views. Partial to full floors up to 8,000 square feet are available. Exposed ceilings, red brick, martini-style columns and concrete floors are hallmarks of the building that also features finished restrooms on each floor. Chroma is located on East Grand Boulevard just east of Woodward and near I-75 with abundant onsite parking.

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6080 Woodward Avenue

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$1,100,000 | 6,794 SQUARE FEET | BUILT IN 1929

Prime location on Woodward Avenue just south of New Center. Located directly across the street from the beautiful WSU Integrative Biosciences Center at the corner of Woodward and Piquette. The two-story, all-brick building is comprised of 3,397 square feet on the ground floor with 12-foot ceilings, 3,397 square on the second floor with 10-foot ceilings, and a full basement. Previously used as a beauty salon on the second floor with retail on the first floor and yoga studio and skincare salon in the basement. The property has been developed over the years, including the addition of a sauna and locker room with showers in the basement. Includes off-street parking behind the building.

Vincent Mazzola
313 704 2678
vincent@oconnordetroit.com

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Method Development

Method Development is a real estate development business started in 2017 that repurposes existing buildings in neighborhoods and helps bring them back to life while keeping the historical integrity of the building. 

How did your business start? 

My business partner and I grew up in the Metro Detroit area. We both moved away and met in Grad School. We wanted to be part of the revitalization of Detroit and help restore Detroit neighborhoods. We love the history, the community and creativity of the neighborhood. 

Why the North End?

The passion of Detroit and doing our part to bring back a great city; you feel the love and passion the neighborhood brings. It makes you want to plant roots in the neighborhood. We love bringing buildings back to life and talking to the community to get their insight for the development plan.

Our tenant Vault of Midnight (https://www.vaultofmidnight.com) is having their Free comic day. We’ve heard this is a massive event and really brings the neighborhood together and other people to come check out the neighborhood!

CONTACT

rocky@methodevelop.com

methodevelop.com

6540 St. Antoine Street 

Instagram: @Md_detroit

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8300 Woodward Avenue

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$1,500,000 | 29,654 SF Square Feet | .61 Acres O’Connor Real Estate is pleased to offer the sale of 8300 Woodward. The stunning two-story white terracotta building, known as “Woodward Tabernacle,” is located in Detroit’s North End neighborhood. Anchoring a busy Woodward Avenue corner, the 1920s building is a prime development opportunity that features incredible ceiling heights, expansive windows and beautiful architectural elements.

Featuring a bright white terracotta exterior, this beautiful building is perfectly situated across from the in-demand Virginia Park Historic District in the New Center neighborhood in Detroit’s North End. Anchoring a highly traveled corner, the 29,654-square-foot freestanding building offers over 120 feet of Woodward Avenue frontage and 200 feet of frontage along Melbourne Street. Walking distance to New Center’s hotspots, including the shops of Woodward, restaurants & bars, a QLine station, several neighborhood parks, and Detroit’s historic Boston Edison neighborhood. Built in 1920 and referred to as the “Woodward Tabernacle,” the property was designed by architect William E. N. Hunter, who is responsible for the design of many of the neighborhood’s churches and large, single-family homes. Unique design features include expansive windows along the first and second floor; a vaulted, second-floor atrium; large interior ceiling heights with concrete columns; a drive-in garage-bay elevator; full-floor basement with elevator access; and intricate architectural design on the facade. The property is well-suited for a mixed-use conversion, featuring retail alongside residential and office above. Within the Opportunity Zone, and zoned B4.

Property Features

  • Opportunity Zone
  • Walkable Neighborhood
  • Over 10’ ceiling heights
  • Woodward Ave frontage
  • Zoned B4

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Pamela Martin Turner – “The Revitalizer”

Hour Detroit’s first issue of 2022 shines a light on “Hour Detroiters” who are making extraordinary strides to create a better, more interesting and fun Detroit. This feature highlights 13 individuals, including Vanguard’s very own president and CEO, Pamela Martin Turner…”The Revitalizer”. Congratulations Pamela! #TheRevitalizer#HourDetroit

https://issuu.com/hour_media/docs/hd0122_digital_v1/40

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Monthly Business Feature: Freya & Dragonfly

Welcoming Freya & Dragonfly to the Neighborhood! 


Freya & Dragonfly is opening in November 2021! Freya & Dragonfly is a unique restaurant and bar offering a fine dining restaurant for the 99% at Freya and a casual cocktail bar featuring low alcohol and non-alcoholic cocktails at Dragonfly. We are so excited to be in this neighborhood and looking forward to opening. 

We are all about food and beverages made with quality ingredients and warm, gracious hospitality. We want our guests to taste the quality in everything we make and serve and to feel at home when they enter our doors. 

We were influenced to open in the Historic North End because of its rich history of art, music, and incredible people. We love how welcoming and gracious this neighborhood has been. Besides the fantastic community we are opening in, the inspiration behind Freya was from trips to world-class restaurants such as Eleven Madison Park in NYC, El Bulli in Spain, and Smyth in Chicago. We wanted to make the quality and flavor of these restaurants accessible to all. Our world travels brought us to the Sherry bodegas in Southern Spain, contributing to the inspiration behind Dragonfly. 

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We are so excited to open to the public because we have been greeted with enthusiasm and encouragement from patrons before even opening! This experience will be unique to this market with a tasting menu restaurant with a vegan option that caters specifically to regular folks rather than only the extremely wealthy. Our talented staff is continually inspiring, and we can’t wait to meet the residents! Even better, we will have a happy hour at Dragonfly that you can’t miss! 

Visit our new restaurant and bar for a wonderful night out in the North End/Milwaukee Junction. 

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If you are looking for a job and feel that this environment would suit you, we have one server position and one bartender position to fill (experience is required for both). We could also use servers at our sister restaurant Chartreuse. Contact sandynlevine@gmail.com if you are interested in applying! 

Meet The Owner: Sandy Levine 

Contact Freya & Dragonfly! 

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$750,000 Knight Foundation grant to expand pilot Wi-Fi initiative in Detroit’s North End

https://www.crainsdetroit.com/technology/750000-knight-foundation-grant-expand-pilot-wi-fi-initiative-detroits-north-end

A grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation will help expand high-speed Wi-Fi access in Detroit’s North End neighborhood.

The $750,000 grant to the the Equitable Internet Initiative will support EII’s efforts to connect 1,000 North End households with free high-speed Internet connections over the next three years.

Those efforts will expand on EII’s pilot project using wireless technology to provide free high-speed Internet to 215 homes in the neighborhood and nearby areas where more than 40 percent of households do not have access, the organizations said in a release.

The estimated annual operations and maintenance costs for EII to serve 1,000 households is $30 per household, per month — about a third of what major providers charge, EII said.

Knight’s investment will support the training of 18 community members as “digital stewards” who will be taught the engineering skills to set up neighborhood-governed networks and serve as local tech support.

EII also plans to pilot low-cost and tiered-payment model for participating households to begin establishing a self-sustaining model for the program.

“The digital divide can be detrimental to career and education opportunities for residents in underserved areas,” Nate Wallace, Knight’s Detroit program director, said in an email announcing the grant. “This project in Detroit serves as a model for other cities working to ensure equal internet access for all neighborhoods.”

EII is a collaboration of multiple organizations, including Detroit Community Technology Project, Grace in Action in Southwest, Church of the Messiah in Islandview, the North End Woodward Community Coalition in the North End and Highland Park and Community Tech New York.

The Rev. Joan Ross, operating director of the North End Woodward Community Coalition, shared EII’s efforts during a White House listening session about the digital divide in May.

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Two Communities Announced for Select Level of the Michigan Main Street Program

https://www.michiganbusiness.org/press-releases/2020/06/two-communities-announced-for-select-level-of-the-michigan-main-street-program/

Historic North End neighborhood of Detroit, Downtown Grosse Pointe join 23 other Michigan communities taking a strategic approach to revitalizing their downtowns and commercial districts

LANSING, Mich. â€“ The historic North End neighborhood of Detroit and the city of Grosse Pointe have been selected by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation to take part in the Select Level of the Michigan Main Street program, MEDC announced today.

As part of the Select Level of Michigan Main Street, these two communities will receive five years of intensive technical assistance from MEDC with a focus on revitalization strategies designed to attract new residents, business investments, economic growth and job creation to their central business districts.

“Now more than ever, it is vital that our communities take a common-sense approach toward strengthening their core commercial districts and driving economic growth in the community as they work to recover from the impact of the COVID-19 virus,” said MEDC Senior Vice President of Community Development Michele Wildman. “With the support of the Main Street program and the MEDC, we can work with our local partners to transform the downtowns and commercial districts in communities to secure the critical role they will play on Michigan’s path toward our future.”

The Michigan Main Street Program aims to create communities distinguished by a “sense of place.” The rationale is based on a range of studies that show investing in creating a “sense of place” is an integral part of developing vibrant downtowns and commercial districts, thereby making the state economically stronger and culturally diverse.

The City of Grosse Pointe and Grosse Pointe Downtown Development Authority are well-positioned for the Select Level of the Michigan Main Street Program due to the overwhelming community support and buy-in for comprehensive downtown revitalization. Many DDA members, business owners and city officials attended the MMS Training Series. Using best practices discussed during the training, the community has made great strides to implement a communication plan and fund development strategy to build broad-based community support and a robust budget for the program. The community is prepared to learn and implement the Main Street Four Point Approach of organization, promotion, design and economic vitality.

The Vanguard Community Development Corporation, which has served as advocate for and worked on behalf of the North End neighborhood since 1994, told a compelling story about the history and transformation that is beginning in the Historic North End neighborhood in Detroit. Vanguard CDC has gathered the support of many district stakeholders including partner organizations and business owners to use the Main Street Approach to continue to the revitalization efforts they have already started in the district. As a result, the North End neighborhood was recognized as being well suited for participation in the Select Level.

Grosse Pointe and the North End neighborhood of Detroit join 23 other communities already benefitting from participation in the Main Street program. Those communities include Blissfield, Boyne City, Charlevoix, Charlotte, Cheboygan, Downtown Lansing, Eaton Rapids, Evart, Grand Haven, Grayling, Howell, Lapeer, Mexicantown Hubbard Communities neighborhood in Detroit, Milan, Niles, Old Town (Lansing), Otsego, Owosso, Saline, Sault Ste. Marie, Three Rivers, Wayland and Wayne.

“Developing downtowns and commercial districts is essential in building a tax base, raising property values and putting people to work,” Wildman said. “Programs like Michigan Main Street provide communities with the tools needed to create jobs, provide desirable places to live and build a sense of place for Michigan residents.”

Over the past year, Michigan Main Street communities generated more than $19 million in private investment, 109 new businesses and 100 façade improvements. Since its inception in 2003, Michigan Main Street has been a catalyst for job growth, private investment and community engagement. From 2003 through 2019, 1,408 new businesses have been launched, with a total public investment of more than $99 million and total private investment of $306 million. In addition, 49,092 volunteer hours were recorded in 2019 in the task of revitalizing downtowns across the state.

In May, in partnership with Reopen Main Street, Downtown Professionals Network and Arnett Muldrow and Associates, Michigan Main Street and the MEDC launched a new Michigan Reopen Main Street website offering resources, strategies and assets for downtowns and communities as they plan for their re-openings following the COVID-19 crisis. The site, https://michigan.reopenmainstreet.com/, is intended to assist Main Street directors, downtown development authority and commercial district managers, small business owners and local stakeholders in navigating the complexities of re-opening their local business districts by providing a variety of recovery resources compiled into one, easy-to-use website.

About Michigan Economic Development Corporation (MEDC)

The Michigan Economic Development Corporation is the state’s marketing arm and lead advocate for business development, job awareness and community development with the focus on growing Michigan’s economy. For more information on the MEDC and our initiatives, visit www.MichiganBusiness.org. For Pure MichiganÂŪ tourism information, your trip begins at www.michigan.org. Join the conversation on: Facebook Instagram LinkedIn, and Twitter.

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