Ground broken on massive mixed-use development in Michigan City

This provided rendering shows what a mixed-use high rise C will look like when it's completed in two years near Michigan City's lakefront.
This provided rendering shows what a mixed-use high rise C will look like when it's completed in two years near Michigan City's lakefront.

MICHIGAN CITY — A ceremony Friday officially broke ground for a 14-story hotel and 12-story condominium tower at a site close to Michigan City’s lakefront.

A rooftop swimming pool, fitness center and spa along with restaurants, bars, cafés and retail shops are included in the construction plans for the development, with views of Lake Michigan on the upper levels of each building.

Farpoint Development out of Chicago is behind the estimated $240 million investment along U.S. 12 just a few hundred yards south of Washington Park.

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Scott Goodman, founder and principal owner of the development firm, said the ongoing construction of a second South Shore Line commuter rail line to speed up travel to and from Chicago was a major factor behind the plans.

Goodman said there will be more than enough demand for the facilities because of the expected influx of Chicago residents to visit and live in Michigan City as a result of the South Shore project, which will reduce roundtrip travel times by rail by more than one hour.

Construction of the second line between Gary and Michigan City is expected to be completed next year.

“We think it’s going to be a game changer for this part of Michigan City,” Goodman said.

During a groundbreaking Friday in Michigan City, developer Alan Schachtman of Farpoint Development points to an artist's rendering of two mixed-use high rises that are slated to be built near the lakefront in the next two years.
During a groundbreaking Friday in Michigan City, developer Alan Schachtman of Farpoint Development points to an artist's rendering of two mixed-use high rises that are slated to be built near the lakefront in the next two years.

Project details

The site will contain 130 condominiums and 230 hotel rooms along with 25,000 square feet of ground level retail space and a parking garage with room for close to 400 vehicles.

Alan Schachtman, a partner in the development firm, said 60 of the condominiums will be strictly for short-term rental use to meet demand for such housing locally.

Schachtman said there will be two-, three- and four-bedroom condominiums with the larger ones priced at about $650,000.

“When you compare to Chicago, it’s going to be incredibly affordable,” he said.

Friday's groundbreaking near the lakefront signals construction will soon begin on two mixed-use towers in Michigan City.
Friday's groundbreaking near the lakefront signals construction will soon begin on two mixed-use towers in Michigan City.

About 100 of the hotel rooms will be suites, while the remaining rooms at the hotel will be more traditional.

Construction, which likely will start before the end of the year, is expected to be completed in about two years.

Clarence Hulse, executive director of the Economic Development Corporation Michigan City, said the site is projected to generate $430 million in property, wages and hotel taxes combined over a 15 year period.

“Not bad for a small town in the Midwest,” he said.

The double-track project is also the incentive for a structure containing 200 luxury apartments on 12 floors above the new South Shore commuter line train station on 11th Street just east of Franklin Street.

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Skyler York, the city’s director of development and planning, said construction of that facility will begin in about three weeks.

'A turning point' for Michigan City

He expects the economic impact from both sites to provide a significant boost to the revitalization that’s already taken place on the city’s north end over the past decade or so.

“We’ll have a lot of visitors here, but, also, we’ll have permanent residents and people living downtown, which is very important. It’s a good thing,” he said.

Scott Goodman of Farpoint Development, center, and Michigan City Mayor Duane Parry, left, discuss a high rise hotel and condominium tower during a ground breaking at the site Friday near the lakefront.
Scott Goodman of Farpoint Development, center, and Michigan City Mayor Duane Parry, left, discuss a high rise hotel and condominium tower during a ground breaking at the site Friday near the lakefront.

Mayor Duane Parry called the hotel/condominium project “a turning point” for Michigan City to realize its potential to become “a jewel of the south shore of Lake Michigan.”

“This is going to set us apart,” he said.

Parry also said other developments now in the talking stages could emerge from the economic snowballing effect anticipated from the double track as soon as early next year.

The entire lakefront area seems primed for major redevelopment.

Indiana State Prison to close: Michigan City officials excited at the development prospect

Hulse said housing for the working class is planned for the 100-acre Indiana State Prison site.

The Indiana Department of Correction announced in August that the prison will close in four or five years and merge into the new 4,200-bed Westville Correctional Facility that the state plans to build.

Higher-end housing and other related amenities could go where the NIPSCO generating station now exists.

The lakefront generating station is slated to close in five years because of NIPSCO’s move toward wind and solar energy.

The hotel/condominium site is also expected to be a springboard for reversing population decline and brain drain in the city.

Hulse said 20,000 new residents with 5,000 of those living on the north end is projected over the next 10 years.

“This parcel sets the tone for what’s going to come,” he said.

This article originally appeared on South Bend Tribune: Development of condos, hotel, retail space underway in Michigan City