I ran into an HVAC professional working on Hudson's recently. She told me the tower will have 49 stories. Not sure if this has been mentioned in this thread, but I thought I'd leave this fact here.
1953
I ran into an HVAC professional working on Hudson's recently. She told me the tower will have 49 stories. Not sure if this has been mentioned in this thread, but I thought I'd leave this fact here.
1953
The Compuware/One Campus Martius building next door is only 232 feet. It doesn't appear the Hudson's building is twice that height, but it's hard to tell from the pictures.
Last edited by LongGone06; June-21-23 at 11:43 AM.
This photo taken at the beginning of April 2023 from the top of the Book Tower gives a better perspective. So now 2 months later, it may indeed be twice the height of the Compuware Building next door...
Update as of 6/29:
This video has some nice shots of the Hudsons site at night [[among other things), figured I'd throw it in here
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=opyzQxGxXzk&t=515s
So...maybe a dumb question about sidewalk access around the site...and perhaps this has been asked previously. Why didn't Bedrock leave space for pedestrian access around the outside of the site? For 5 years now, the sidewalk along Woodward on the east side has been closed...5 years of people walking in the street, and according to Michigan Traffic Crash Facts, there has been several vehicle pedestrian injury crashes as a result.
Is it really just that nobody in the region cares about pedestrians and/or bothered to take 10 seconds to think through the implications? All we're talking about is maybe 10 feet on a 50+ foot setback. Or is there something more nuanced that prevented the provision of pedestrian access around the site?
KnnNike,
Here's a picture I took for you, it's from today [7/11/2023]. It shows the space next to the Hudson Site.
Last edited by Scottathew; July-11-23 at 02:48 PM.
While I agree they should have left access, it's hard to have simpathy for someone walking on Woodward because they're too lazy to cross the street and use the sidewalk.So...maybe a dumb question about sidewalk access around the site...and perhaps this has been asked previously. Why didn't Bedrock leave space for pedestrian access around the outside of the site? For 5 years now, the sidewalk along Woodward on the east side has been closed...5 years of people walking in the street, and according to Michigan Traffic Crash Facts, there has been several vehicle pedestrian injury crashes as a result.
Is it really just that nobody in the region cares about pedestrians and/or bothered to take 10 seconds to think through the implications? All we're talking about is maybe 10 feet on a 50+ foot setback. Or is there something more nuanced that prevented the provision of pedestrian access around the site?
^^ Say what?? They are working on the whole block... I'm sure their insurance carrier for the construction folks says NO PEDESTRIANS. Also, I'm sure that the signage around there say NO PEDESTRIANS. People can easily walk across the street to cross past the building site. I'm also sure that those folks who got into accidents did so because of their own stupidity and didn't read or see the signage that says NO PEDESTRIANS.
When will the project be completed? First I had read by 2024 and now I had read in 2025
When are we going to get an official name for this development? It can not be called the Hudson site forever. I'm going with the "Gilbert Center."
Gilbertville.
Gilbertland or Gilbertworld might be too pompous and disneyfied a name for Detroiters to absorb without choking on their Coney Island aka Michigan Red Hot.
Name it the Hudson's Block or Hudson's Complex
Spec Center. Largest mixed use complex built entirely on spec.
Except it's not built entirely on spec so...
Name one signed tenant before construction broke ground. Don't get me wrong I admire Gilbert still going ahead when the office portion of the market turned sour just as downtown needed new construction but I don't recall any tenants prior to the hotel announcement, which was a couple of years after construction began. Actually, I still don't know of any others?
Last edited by 401don; July-12-23 at 12:54 PM.
Name one signed tenant before construction broke ground. Don't get me wrong I admire Gilbert still going ahead when the office portion of the market turned sour just as downtown needed new construction but I don't recall any tenants prior to the hotel announcement, which was a couple of years after construction began. Actually, I still don't know of any others?
I’m speccing here, but something like a new offshoot of Dan Gilbert’s many companies could rent a huge bloc of space; Dantures: short for Dan’s Ventures?
Update as of 7/13:
Maybe a Fortune 500 company will lease out a floor.
The FOC already has a bunch of empty floors all over the Bedrock properties downtown. WFH and layoffs have drastically reduced the gilbert companies' space needs. More cutting to come as the mortgage business isn't getting any better and thats what keeps the lights on for the whole org. Any moves into the hudson building of RKT entities would just leave emptier buildings in other areas.
Right now the glass is up to about half of the tower's eventual height.
Tell me you're not a regular pedestrian without telling me you're not a regular pedestrian. I do make this crossing at least once a week, and depending on traffic and signal timing, it's a PITA. I frequently have to go from my office south of this location, to a client site one block to the north. An otherwise 5 minute walking trip is doubled in some cases.
This would be like shutting down Woodward for 5 years and telling people to use Cass or John R....you wouldn't do that, so why is it okay for sidewalks?
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