Meridian Health Plan Headquarters

Meridian Health Plan Headquarters
General information
Status Proposed
Type Medical offices
Location 32 Monroe St, Detroit, Michigan
Coordinates 42°19′48″N 83°02′42″W / 42.33°N 83.045°W / 42.33; -83.045Coordinates: 42°19′48″N 83°02′42″W / 42.33°N 83.045°W / 42.33; -83.045
Construction started Summer 2014
Completed Early 2017
Cost $111 Million USD (2013 Dollars)
Owner Meridian Health Plan
Technical details
Floor count 16
Floor area 230,000 sq ft (21,000 m2)
Design and construction
Developer Schostak Bros. & Co.
References
[1][2]

Meridian Health Plan Headquarters is a proposed highrise in the Campus Martius district of downtown Detroit. The skyscraper will rise 16 stories with office space, ground level retail outlets, a state-of-the-art plaza, and a 9 story, 1,000 space parking deck. This will be the first office building construction in Detroit since the completion of One Kennedy Square in 2006. Detroit-based Meridian Health Plan is expected to be the sole office tenant in the 16-story building on the block bounded by Monroe, Bates and Farmer streets by Campus Martius Park. Meridian would occupy up to 300,000 square feet of space in the $111 million development. The Class A building would include first-floor retail space and a nine-story, 1,000-space parking deck.

The brownfield incentives would be for site preparation and infrastructure improvements at the 1.96-acre site, a 230-space surface parking lot, according to Washington, D.C.-based real estate information service CoStar Group Inc. Meridian, which has about 620 employees in two downtown offices in One Kennedy Square, 777 Woodward Ave., and the Dan Gilbert-owned 1001 Woodward building, would move into its new headquarters in early 2017, according to Sean Cotton, the company's general counsel. By that time, the company expects to have 1,050 employees in Detroit. Meridian initiated the new building project and hired Livonia-based Schostak Bros. as the developer.

Design and Construction

The site of the building is currently an oddly shaped, 230-space parking lot. Special architectural elements include a "floating box" like element, which is said to be the site of a restaurant. Other surprising elements include a levitating belt of ivy, which will span from the 9-story parking deck, through the plaza, and to the side of the building. The main developer of the mid-rise is Schostak Bros. & Co. construction, which is located in the nearby suburb of Livonia.

References

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