Pure Visibility adds 2 people in Ann Arbor

The leadership behind Pure Visibility knows the economy is turning a corner because the firm is already peaking around it.The downtown Ann Arbor-based firm, which shares the stately First National Building with other new economy companies like LLamasoft, has hired four people over the last year, expanding its staff to 14 people. It is gearing up for even more business and few more hires in 2010."There is something shifting right now," says Catherine Juon, co-founder and catalyst for Pure Visibility. "Larger companies are realizing that they need more than their own marketing departments if they want to grow today."The search-engine-optimization firm specializes in helping its clients attract more traffic by priming their websites so they can be found in things like Google searches. The firm is analytics-certified by Google, which is not a designation that is easily achieved.Juon points out that most of the firms that are upping business with Pure Visibility are those that deal with high-value sales that occur over a long-term cycle. That has prompted Pure Visibility to become more aggressive when it comes to attracting business."For the firs time in our five years we're proactively going after sales," Juon says. "Up until now we have been picking up the phone."Source: Catherine Juon, co-founder and catalyst for Pure VisibilityWriter: Jon Zemke

White House, Ann Arbor, U-M continue to intersect

The words Ann Arbor, University of Michigan and the White House continue to be said in the same sentence as President Obama gets ready to give the commencement speech at U-M. One of Ann Arbor's famed entrepreneurs, Menlo Innovations Rich Sheridan, talks to the White House about creating workplace flexibility.Excerpt:Though it was only announced last month that President Barack Obama would be the speaker at this spring's commencement, University officials have been communicating with the White House since last April to try to get the president to speak at the Big House.According to documents obtained by The Michigan Daily through a Freedom of Information Act request, University President Mary Sue Coleman first contacted Alyssa Mastromonaco, White House director of scheduling and advance, on April 30, 2009. Following the initial letter, Coleman sent a formal invitation directly to Obama last September. In her letter to Obama, Coleman highlighted the University’s history as one of the premier public universities in the country. Coleman also encouraged the president to come to Ann Arbor by referencing the University’s commitment to topics important to his administration like economic expansion, developing alternative energy sources, sustainability and health care. "The University of Michigan vigorously pursues the many issues our nation faces and that you are tackling as president," Coleman wrote to Obama in her September letter. "Your visit would inspire and motivate continued progress in these areas."Read the rest of the story here and how Menlo Innovations' Rich Sheridan is consulting with the White House here.

Ann Arbor’s Logic Solutions continues China expansion

China seems like a logical place for growth for Logic Solutions. Makes sense why the Ann Arbor-based firm continues to grow in one of the fastest-growing markets in the world.Excerpt:Ann Arbor-based Logic Solutions Inc. Wednesday announced several achievements of its China Services division, which supports United States companies with their operations in China. Recent successes include staffing for technology giant Cisco, and facilitating commerce between business automation center provider LogicLink and hoteliers Sheraton Shanghai Hongqiao, Howard Johnson All Suite Hotel Shanghai, Holiday Inn Shanghai Pudong, and Jin Jiang Y.M.C.A Hotel.Logic Solutions has provided three staff members for Cisco, bolstering their efforts at the Shanghai World Expo. Candidates will manage logistics for the massive event that begins May 1. The Expo’s Web site reports an expected 70 million visitors, and 200 companies will serve as presenters, including Cisco.Read the rest of the story here.

Ann Arbor’s economy begins to rev up, hire

The Ann Arbor economy is poised to recover and lead the economic recovery across the state of Michigan, a recovery that hold big potential for new white collar hires.Excerpt:The Ann Arbor region’s economy is poised to steadily add jobs over the next two years, economists say, but a lack of access to capital threatens to slow the pace of recovery. Twenty executives from the region's top alternative energy companies gathered this morning to discuss the obstacles to accelerating their growth in a forum with John Fernandez, assistant secretary for the U.S. Department of Commerce. The common theme: We need capital in all forms. The executives said improved access to financing is critical to helping them expand their businesses, target new markets and add jobs."It's a consistent message we hear everywhere we go," Fernandez said. "It used to be a valley of death. Now it’s more like an ocean of death."Read the rest of the story here, how Adaptive Materials is hiring here and how the area's educated workforce is starting to take off here.

NY Times highlights Ann Arbor’s Tissue Regeneration Services

Old school: Replacing human joints. New school: Harvesting home-grown replacement bones. This is news for University of Michigan spin-off Tissue Regeneration Systems.Excerpt:Scott Hollister, a professor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, is a co-founder of Tissue Regeneration Systems, a company that is commercializing technology his group is developing for skeletal reconstruction in the face, spine and extremities.Dr. Vunjak-Novakovic, who has filed a patent application through Columbia, said that her lab’s work had attracted considerable interest from investors, but that it was too soon to talk about commercial applications. “We are starting studies with large animals that will establish safety and feasibility before commercialization, “she said. Read the rest of the story here.

U-M makes Washington Post’s 2010 College Tour

When it comes to college consideration for cream of the crop of high school students, the University of Michigan continues to make the list of school's to tour.Excerpt:The one thing that stood out for us was the football stadium. It is iconic. They call it the Big House, and it is a destination in and of itself. They charge kids a couple hundred dollars for a season of football tickets but everybody loves to go to the games. The school had a lot of school spirit.We really liked the balance of sports and academic excellence, including the honors colleges for freshmen.Ann Arbor seems like a great town to spend time in. They get a lot of theater and comedy groups and music groups there, which are pretty cool.Read the rest of the story here.

Zaragon Place gears up for downtown Ann Arbor sequel

The developers behind the original Zaragon Place think it was such a success that it's starting to push a sequel through the city approval process.Chicago-based Zaragon is proposing to build a 14-story high-rise with 99 rental units and ground-floor retail space. There will also be a fitness center and on-site parking garage. The structure would go up at southeast corner of William and Thompson streets next to the Cottage Inn Restaurant in downtown Ann Arbor.That corner was formerly home to a long-time vacant bank branch before Zaragon leveled the 2-story structure. The rest of the intersection is flanked by St. Mary's Catholic Church, a small apartment building and the Raja Rani Indian restaurant. Zaragon built the original Zaragon Lofts at 619 E University, razing the historic Anberay Apartment building. The new 10-story building features 66 apartments above ground-floor retail space and about 40 underground parking spots, just north of East Quad. Zaragon Place was one the first in a new crop of luxury high-rise living options for students and young professionals in downtown Ann Arbor. 4Eleven Lofts recently opened at Division and Washington streets. A number of other projects are on the boards, too, including 601 S Forest and the University of Michigan's North Quad at State and Huron streets.Zaragon will host a preliminary public meeting from 4-6 p.m. Monday in the first floor of the University of Michigan's Union. Plans will be submitted to the city April 26. The developer expects to go before the city Planning Commission on June 15 and City Council on August 15. For information on the project, call Lisa Miner at (312) 867-3840.Source: City of Ann ArborWriter: Jon Zemke

Developers plan 2nd phase of Windsong townhomes

Most developers these days run long on plans and short on financing. The people behind Windsong are claiming they have both.A partnership between Excel Realty Group (Shaker Heights, Ohio) and Epic Development (Altamont Springs, Florida) is pushing for city of Ann Arbor approval to build the second phase of a town home development on Stone School Road just north of Elsworth Road. Peter Jobson, president of Excel Realty, says they have the ever-elusive financing lined up and are ready to start working this summer."Ann Arbor is a strong market," Jacobson says. "It's probably the strongest market in Michigan. This product is not offered elsewhere in the marketplace so we're seeing a strong demand for it."The development got its start as a for-sale version of the Oaks of Ann Arbor earlier this decade. The first phase (12 units) was built but it stalled when the housing market nose dived. Since then the developers have switched the project to rentals and have filled up the dozen townhouses. It plans to make the 32 other townhouses of the second phase rentals, too.Each town home measures about 1,500 square feet with four bedrooms and attached garages. Each unit comes with walk-in closets, high-end appliances and designer finishes. "They're town homes but they live like single-family attached homes," Jacobson says.Rents are still being determined. Jacobson and his partners hope to begin construction in mid June and finish in early 2011.Source: Peter Jacobson, president of Excel Realty GroupWriter: Jon Zemke

Moravian development draws young professionals to City Council

An unusual thing happened at Monday's Ann Arbor City Council meeting - a large, vocal group of mostly young people rallied to support the Monrovian development.It's unusual because such controversial projects normally only attract neighborhood activists and those who oppose the project for various reasons. A vast majority of the time, the developer is left to defend his project against a hostile crowd.That wasn't the case Monday night. A large group of concerned citizens, residents and various other stakeholders came out to speak for and against the proposed dense, urban apartment development on Madison Street across the street from Fingerle Lumber Co. The two sides, which each rallied dozens of concerned voices, basically broke down to mostly older people mixed with a few younger faces opposed to the development and mostly younger people combined with a handful of older faces backing it. The supporters were predominantly composed of twenty and thirtysomething professionals who said they wanted more options to live near downtown. They complained that student-oriented sub-divided houses and downtown condos that were prohibitively expensive were their only options. To them the density offered by projects like the 66-unit Moravian provide them with an attractive alternative. They expressed a desire for newer, safer, more energy-efficient housing. Though the project's apartments would be more expensive than the block's current rental properties (mostly older homes), they expressed a clear preference for the Moravian.The Moravian development was o feature 4-5 stories (depending on which end of building you start at) with 62 apartments and 160 bedrooms. The developer hoped to include geothermal heating system and attain LEED certification. Affordable housing units, about 19 percent of the units, would also be part of the mix.A level of ground-floor parking (90 spaces) behind 3-6 units of ground floor commercial space on Madison was also proposed. The ground floor retail units would be connected to residential units above. The retail spaces would measure between 600-1,500 square feet and would be available for the likes of professional offices (architects, attorneys, etc), a cafe or even art gallery.Linda Foit, a research associate at the University of Michigan, spoke in favor of the Moravian. The 28-year-old originally from Germany lives a few doors down from the proposed site in an 100-year-old single-family house that was sub-divided into apartments long ago. A place she says is so energy inefficient that to heat it "is to heat the entire street in the winter." "I found it devastating the condition of the housing that was available to us," Foit says. "It was a variety of rat holes really."Tony Lupo's co-workers would love to live in a place so close to downtown. The director of sales and marketing for SalonVox, a downtown business that employs 21 people, says he is the only staff member that lives downtown even though most of his co-workers would like to. Lupo, a 20 something who had been living in New York City before coming to Ann Arbor, spoke out in favor of the development on behalf of himself, his company and his co-workers. He said he only managed to get a downtown apartment above an art gallery after months of searching and an extremely lucky break."It's a total game of chance," Lupo says. "For a city that wants to attract young professionals and people who want to be near a downtown environment it shouldn't be this difficult."Those opposed had a sharply different view. They see the Morovian as out of character with a historic neighborhood they have lived and invested in for decades. "The neighbors see it for what it really was, an attack on the downtown and the near downtown neighborhoods," says Ray Detter, a downtown resident and local activist.After nearly four hours of public comment (a supposed record), six of the ten members of Ann Arbor City Council present voted in favor of approving it. However, a petition from nearby residents forced a parliamentary maneuver requiring a super majority of eight votes for it to pass, so the proposal was defeated.Jeff Helminski, the developer, is still weighing his options on what to do next. Normally, a lawsuit follows such decisions, but Helminski is conferring with his partners on whether it makes more sense to resubmit revised plans, appeal to the city's Zoning Board of Appeals, continue to negotiate with the city or call in the attorneys."It's our hope that this is not how it goes, but it's possible," Helminski says.Source: Jeff Helminski, developer of the Moravian and Linda Foit, Tony Lupo and Ray Detter, downtown Ann Arbor residentsWriter: Jon Zemke

Walls go up and hole goes down at Library Lot project

The retaining walls for the Library Lot underground parking garage are going higher as construction workers continue to dig deeper into downtown Ann Arbor.Work crews have dug most of the panhandle section of the project that reaches out to Division Street and are gearing up to take on the large section that fronts Fifth Avenue. The plan is to drill in the last retaining wall pylons this spring, while expanding the dig this summer. The Fifth Avenue section will be scraped out in August. The entire hole should be dug by September, which is more challenging than it appears."Logistics is actually the hard part of this project," says Gary Shannon, senior project superintendent for Christman, which is quarterbacking construction for the project.That hard part equals out to 250,000 cubic yards of mostly clean dirt (the soil is virgin after you get below the initial 8-10 feet) that needs to be excavated, followed by the removal of excavation equipment. Some of the dirt will be reused for the concrete for the 677-car parking deck. The rest will be shipped to an off-site just outside of the city and be used by other construction projects in southeast Michigan.Once the dirt is removed, concrete will begin - all 43,000 cubic yards of it. To put that in perspective, that's enough cement to pour a new sidewalk between Ann Arbor and Battle Creek, on both sides of the street. This will be accompanied by 4,500 tons of reinforcing steel that will be embedded into the structure. (Another fun fact: Laid out end to end, the steel would run almost 650 miles).The whole project, which will stretch well into next year, is employing about 35-40 people right now. It will hit its maximum crew size of 130-140 people when the concrete pour is in full swing.Source: Gary Shannon, senior project superintendent for Christman and Adrian Iraola, president of Park Avenue ConsultantsWriter: Jon Zemke

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