HomeMy WebLinkAboutPRDA MINUTES 2000-02-03 MINUTES OF THE 107TH REGULAR MEETING OF THE PLYMOUTH
ROAD DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF LIVONIA
The 107th Regular Meeting of the Plymouth Road Development Authority of the City of
Livonia, Michigan was called to order at 3:01 p.m., Thursday, February 3, 2000 in the 4th Floor
Conference Room at City Hall.
Members Present: Mayor Jack E. Kirksey
Mr. Michael Polsinelli,Chairman
Mr. Jerry Wordhouse,Vice Chairman
Mr. Scott Grace
Mr. Dennis Kujawa
Mr. Bill Pike
Mr. Raby
Mr. Duane Wolfgang
Mr. Marvin Walkon
Mr. Lowell Peterson
Mr. Rod Crider
Members Absent: Ms. Toni Mette
Mr. Stan Anderson
Others Present : Mr. John J.Nagy, Director,P.R.D.A.
Mr. Mark Taormina, Planning Director
Mrs. JoAnn Marshall, BRI
Mr. Scott Reinholt, BRI
Mr. Bob Gunnigle, Bill Brown Ford
Mr. Dan Dirks, SMART
Mr. Larry O'Connor, Livonia Observer
Mr. Ralph Williams
Ms. Susan Annibal, Secretary
1. Roll was called.
2. Adoption of the January 20 2000 Minutes: On a motion duly made, seconded and
unanimously adopted, it was
#2000-63 RESOLVED,that the Minutes of the 106th Regular Meeting held by the Plymouth Road
Development Authority on January 20, 2000 are approved.
Mr. Polsinelli,Chairman, declared the motion is carried and the foregoing resolution adopted.
3. Comments from Chairman: We are in receipt of transmittal letters from John Nagy regarding
the loan and grant programs and transmitting same to the Department of Law and Finance.
4. Bill Brown Ford: Mr. Bob Gunnigle, representing Bill Brown Ford, presented a site plan which
affected the former Terrace Theater property. Petition 2000-2-2-4 for waiver use approval of
plans concerning new vehicle display, used vehicle display and sales, parts storage and vehicle
servicing on the site, which property is located on the north side of Plymouth Road between
Sears Drive and Tech Center Drive. This petition is scheduled to come before the City Planning
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lkirow Commission soon. The petitioner is seeking a letter of support from the Board endorsing the
plan and acknowledging that Bill Brown Ford had appeared before the P.R.D.A. A brief
overview of the substance of the petition, as well as site particulars, was offered. About 25
employees were anticipated at the new facility, and about 300 new/used vehicles were expected
to be displayed. The George Burns Theater site has been used for the storage and display of
vehicles, but the number was under 300. Mr. Gunnigle addressed proposed landscaping, stating
that there was a new landscape plan, which had been requested by the P.R.D.A., as well as a
stone fence, which would be bordered by flowers (salvia) and planting of"lots of shrubs" in the
area. Green space and lawn area around the building would be retained, adding about 250 new
plants. The proposal was only a percentage point from complying with landscape requirements.
To begin with, only the front portion of the existing building floor area will be used until plans
are finalized for the rear portion,which is being considered for a body shop area, although it isn't
quite complete, as yet. Irrigation will be maintained on the site. Addressing the three (3) curb
cuts in front of the building, the petitioner hoped to retain all three along Plymouth Road. When
questioned if there is any plan to remove the middle one, Mr. Gunnigle said, "No; it's a big piece
of property," and the middle curb cut looks like it belongs. The Buick dealership next door had
its own drive. Both new and used vehicles were proposed for display in front of the building.
BRI's recommendation was to eliminate a drive. The petitioner's desires to make ingress and
egress easy for customers. BRI had also recommended that the plant selections be changed,
which the petitioner confirms has been done. A discussion followed on the subject of wall
signage and that the "Terrace" sign was coming down to be replaced with a tasteful blue (Bill
Brown Ford) oval sign there. As to the repair facility in the rear, there will be four (4) service
bays there. The east elevation showed six (6) doors, and the west elevation showed two (2)
doors. This might change slightly; an error has been detected. Mr. Gunnigle presented a color
rendering of the façade. As other Bill Brown buildings, this would be a neutral color done in
good taste. Although there would be a locked gate, which could be chained and locked, so that
the Fire Department could use bolt cutters should it be necessary to gain access. There could be
certain ways to accomplish that. It is more a matter of public safety rather than aesthetics,
although appearance along the corridor was a factor. As far as an alternative, possibly the
petitioner will utilize a metal gate with a padlock, so the Fire Department could gain entry easily.
Revisiting the signage issue again, Mr. Gunnigle believes that adequate signage is "key" to the
success of this location. Mr. Nagy explained that the petitioner was entitled to both a wall sign
and a freestanding sign. The existing marquee will be cleaned up and used for advertisement of
community events, i.e.,the annual holiday parade and other events The petitioner hopes to be in
at this location pretty quickly, as early as the 1st of May and believes that this location will
introduce Bill Brown Ford to a completely different group of customers. Regarding the gate
closure,the petitioner would look into black wrought iron.
On a motion by Mr. Wordhouse, seconded by Mr. Crider, and unanimously approved, it was:
#2000-64 RESOLVED,that the Plymouth Road Development Authority does hereby
unanimously support the proposed use and the site, building and landscape
plans as submitted by Bill Brown Ford for their new facility,which will
include new vehicle display, used vehicle display and sales, parts storage,
body shop and vehicle servicing in the S.W. 'A of Section 26, at 30400
Plymouth Road(former Terrace Theater property).
Mr. Polsinelli,Chairman, declared the motion is carried and the foregoing resolution is adopted.
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trio 5. Mike Slater—Budget Report: Commentary covered financial statements as of November 30,
1999 for the Construction and Special Revenue Funds. The new balance for the Construction
fund is $260,689.11, most of which will be gone when we get through with projects up to Phase
III. We'll have about $350,000.00. When this is gone we can simply go on to the Special
Revenues Fund for further monies. Total liabilities and Construction Fund balance at year's end
amount to $1,246,476.46. The deadline for spending the $1.2 million will be in May without the
Retainage. The Special Revenues Fund now has total liabilities and a fund balance of
$4,024,536.80 for the 1999 Fiscal Year, with liabilities of$40,000.00. Total Fund balance at the
year's end is$3,983,275.89. There was quite a bit of activity due to the Winter Holiday Parade.
5. Beckett& Raeder—Construction Progress Report: JoAnn Marshall reported that Jacobs was
finishing up on light poles and bases, with Detroit Edison completing Merriman, Farmington and
everything to the west. Edison is aware that there are a couple of poles to be energized. The
remaining foundations are in with poles going in the next Monday, with fixtures and splicing to
complete the work. Physical work would be done Monday and Tuesday. So, by the end of the
next week, Jacobs will be finished there. Mr. Reinholt is very ill, but would be providing bus
shelter information to the Board at the next meeting (February 17th) and will be bringing
Mr. Gary Cooper along with him. Packets for the bus plaza and curb repair work is complete
and will go out for bid this week. We are still waiting for MDOT's review comments. That
would be ready to go by the end of the next week. The question of how long after energizing the
new controllers will it take before tearing down the existing poles would be answered hopefully
at the next meeting. Contractors would respond in about two weeks, and recommendation for a
contractor with a price should be ready for the first meeting in March. BRI has made projections
for bus plazas and picked the locations on a map trying to get a representative amount for a
shelter in 12' brick landscaped area with a bench with trees, shrubs and perennials. There are 39
stops within our project area, 17 with the plaza work. Concentration was now on just four (4)
bus stop enclosure areas. Covered in this discussion was curb ramps for handicap accessibility.
Participating in this discussion was Dan Dirks, General Manager of SMART. There was a
concern about the number of riders and where those numbers might be important. Which stops
were priorities? It was suggested that we meet with SMART's Planning Staff on this.
Wonderland is a high stop area, and SMART selected four plazas that warrant this type of
shelter. Mr. Dirks will speak with SMART's Planning Staff and see what recommendations they
might provide. He was looking forward to this, as he had a theory about the impact he thought it
would have. It was pointed out that we didn't want SMART's advertising on our shelters along
the Corridor. We would maintain the shelters ourselves in lieu of said advertising. The
Chairman reminded SMART's representative that we are prepared to buy, but numbers we'd
been given seemed very high with no advertising. We are trying to make these improvements in
our program without the advertising allowed. SMART will provide us with a price without the
advertising. The location of some stops could change. Some technical numbers about distance
from the intersection, curb, etc. were discussed. Any maintenance we provided had to meet
ADA requirements. Regarding the location of stops, SMART didn't change stops that often.
when a stop is changed, it's because of bus or homeowners' requests, which wouldn't be
probably because of the locations now. SMART's bus stop person will be sent out to address the
Board. Also, SMART is flexible when it comes to signage. Ridership numbers were doing
extremely well,with a 25% increase, being the top ridership in the County. We are doing a first-
class job on Plymouth Road, and SMART's bus shelter, offered with or without advertising, is
very appealing. The SMART rep offered to find out what the actual shelter itself does cost.
Perhaps there is a manufacturer from whom we can buy direct. Is there a break if P.R.D.A.
maintains them? The representative will get back with Mr. Nagy, Mrs. Marshall and Mr.
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(by Reinholt. SMART's address is: First National Building, 660 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, MI
48226.
6. Reports from Committees:
Construction Committee: Nothing to report
Public Relations: Nothing to report..
Vacant Buildings: Nothing to report.
.Inspection: Nothing to report.
Development Assistance Committee: Mike Fisher has under review the draft of the
Development Assistance Committee program for financial assistance. When his review is
complete it will be back for the full Board's review and adoption.
7. Director's Report: Our next scheduled meeting will be at the Legacy Restaurant. The
former Lasky Furniture store is being converted into an office building. They have provided
exterior elevations for a new store front with an office motif. (This is planned for a training
center.) Planning Commission has been working with them. Horizon Properties has developed a
site plan for an office use, and it is short on parking. The petitioner has negotiated the south one-
half of the lot across the street for parking; however, they will still be deficient 19 spaces and
will go to the ZBA. There are plans to continue the brick on the side of the building. The
Planning Commission will address the issue of aesthetics with the petitioner, more than likely on
the meeting next Tuesday. The petitioner will be put on notice that they are or aren't in
compliance with the ordinance. Horizon is licensed with the State of Michigan and Wayne
County. It was suggested that approval be held up until the petitioner had approval from the
ZBA. Mark Taormina, the City's Planning Director, said more will be known about this
proposal on Tuesday(P.C. meeting). No recommendation is offered. Regarding the new Floors
America facility (formerly New York Carpet World), there will be new signage on the building,
with a sign on the west of the Wonderland property. Ownership is still held by New York Carpet
World.
7. Polling of Board Members
Mr. Wordhouse: Passed.
Mr. Raby: Board members were reminded of the Business Expo which will be held on Tuesday,
February 22nd and Wednesday, February 23rd from 9:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. and urged members
to mark it on their calendars. On the evening of February 22nd there will again be the Taste of
Livonia extravaganza.
Mr. Crider: Passed.
Mr. Pike: Passed.
Mr. Wolfgang: Passed.
Mr. Grace: Passed.
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Mr. Peterson: Passed.
Mr.Kujawa: Passed.
Mr. Walkon: Home Depot will be opening at Millennium Park on March 2nd. Numbers of
employees would be reported to the Board at another time.
Mr. Taormina reported that someone is interested in a service station facility for the Showcase
Video site on Wayne Road.
10. Adjournment: On a motion duly made, seconded and unanimously adopted,the 106th Regular
Meeting held by the Plymouth Road Development Authority on January 20, 2000 was adjourned
at 4:20p.m.
The next meeting of the Plymouth Road Development Authority will be held on February 17,
2000 at the Legacy of Livonia Restaurant, 34110 Plymouth Road at 3:00 p.m.
---)a-x-Lteec-eSusan Annibal, Secretary
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