Start-ups and creatively inclined companies have rushed to fill up the
space in the Elevator Building, leasing all but one space in the old
warehouse-turned-office building next to the Chene Park overlooking the
Detroit River.
The 20,000-square-foot building has nine companies
occupying space on its second floor and another eight on the first
floor. Among the companies leasing space are
M1/DTW, an architectural-design firm, and
Grit Design,
a smartphone application company. Other companies include tech firms
that deal with touchscreen technology and entertainment firms in both
film and music industries.
"That's just what the economy is bringing me," says Randy Lewarchik, owner of the
Elevator Building. "All I'm doing is free Craigslist ads. I haven't paid for advertising for this building yet."
The
103-year-old building on Franklin Street has served as an industrial
warehouse for most of its life, including a stint as a bootlegging hub
for the Purple Gang, according to Lewarchik.
The 30-something developer
bought the building a few years ago with the idea of turning it into
condos. The housing crisis forced him to switch business plans, turning
the building into a loft-style office space for small businesses.
All
of the office spaces, which range in size from a few hundred to a few
thousand square feet, are leased. One small space remains, but Lewarchik
wants to rent it out to a bar or eatery. "I want something that would
offer a benefit to the building that is socially oriented," Lewarchik
says.
Source: Randy Lewarchik, owner of the Elevator Building
Writer: Jon Zemke
You pick the topics and we will let you know when it hits the press.