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  1. #1

    Default Bedrock, Curis Enterprises Buy L.B. King Building

    Curis Enterprises, a Detroit-based real estate development and management firm, has teamed up with Bedrock Real Estate Services to purchase the L.B. King Building, located just east of the former Hudson's department store building.
    "We are pleased to add this beautiful, historic building to our growing real estate portfolio as our first acquisition of 2015," says Jim Ketai, CEO and managing partner of Bedrock Real Estate Services in Detroit. "The building is in close proximity to The Z garage and the art-filled alley known as 'The Belt.' The dining and entertainment venue Punch Bowl Social is just around the corner and Citizen Yoga, 7 Greens, and Nojo Kicks are down the street.
    "This block has become one of many great downtown destinations with restaurants, retail, art, and entertainment."
    The project builds upon a growing portfolio of collaborative efforts between the two real estate firms, says Anthony Curis, vice president of Curis Enterprises. Curis is also a partner with his wife, J.J., at Library Street Collective, the art gallery that helped bring in nearly 30 artists to design murals at The Z, as well as curating the HENSE mural on the south wall of the Madison Building.
    "We've had the pleasure of collaborating with Dan Gilbert and Bedrock Real Estate Services on a handful of cultural projects in the city," Curis says. "The L.B. King Building [[1274 Library Street) is an architecturally significant property adjacent to several of these projects including the Belt, a newly renovated public alley in downtown Detroit."
    In the early 20th century, the six-story building at Library Street and Grand River Avenue served as the headquarters for china merchant L.B. King and Co. It was also the home base of Annis Furs from 1932 through 1983.
    Today, the building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is home to tenants including Parjana, Hair Lab Detroit, and the law firm of Phifer, Phillips & White.
    According to the historical marker adorning the Chicago commercial-style building, the structure "features a steel frame, terra cotta skin, three-part vertical division, and banks of 'Chicago windows.'
    "As always, we will give careful thought and consideration to plans for the building," Ketai says. "We will maintain the integrity of the historic architecture, as we always do, and attract dynamic new tenants to work alongside existing tenants."​
    http://www.dbusiness.com/daily-news/...ntown-Detroit/

    The Belt
    http://detroit.cbslocal.com/video?au...lipId=10846482
    Last edited by hybridy; January-23-15 at 02:43 PM.

  2. #2

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    Great news again. These buildings are wonderfully well designed, and display perfect proportions for retail storefronts. Gimme those anyday over Apple stores.

    I didn't know about the alley becoming a street art display. That also is one of the many plusses of Detroit's revival.

  3. #3

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    Soon every last building in Gilberttown Detroit will have [[OCP) Bedrock real estate logo on it. Keep buying Dan Gilbert. create your Delta City wonder.

  4. #4

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    Keep it up Dan G!! Tell all the riff-raff to hit 8 mile!!!!

  5. #5

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    Great for lofts

  6. #6

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    Quote Originally Posted by stasu1213 View Post
    Great for lofts
    how many? what would be the dimensions of each unit?

  7. #7

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    Just to be clear, this is what I might refer to as the Anns Firs building, right?

  8. #8

  9. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by Hypestyles View Post
    how many? what would be the dimensions of each unit?
    Dont know about the dimensions but the upstairs be made into them or just more offic space. I had forgotten that there was a coffee shop next store

  10. #10

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    6000 sq/ft per floor.

    Judging by 1701 picture linked above that shows the front of the building, you could have 4 units on each floor, 2nd floor to the 6th floor. That would be 20 units at around 1200 sq/ft per unit. If the 7th floor is an attic which it looks to be, the 6th floor units could be 2 stories at 2400 sq/ft. Downside being the units being pretty narrow.

    Another option would be to have 2 units on each floor for a total of 10 units. Each being 2400 sq/ft with the top 2 units being 3600 sq/ft.

    Another possibility would be to split the floors based on the window layout on the side of the building facing Grand River. There could be 3 units on each floor, 2nd floor to the 6th floor for a total of 15 units eating being around 1500 sq/ft.

    But these are assumptions and elevator locations/ stairways drive the layouts.

    Quote Originally Posted by stasu1213 View Post
    Great for lofts

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