Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Greenfield project moves forward.

84 South site will have fewer units

- TOM DAYKIN

The apartments planned for Greenfield’s 84 South mixed-use developmen­t will have around 90 fewer units than initially proposed.

Fiduciary Real Estate Developmen­t Inc. initially proposed four four-story buildings, totaling 360 apartments, at the 48-acre project site bordered by I-894, W. Layton Ave., S. 84th St. and S. 92nd St.

However, Fiduciary now wants to develop 268 units. The unit count is being reduced by developing three-story buildings instead of four-story buildings, according to revised plans submitted to the city.

The Plan Commission at its Tuesday night meeting unanimousl­y recommende­d approval for the change, which also needs Common Council approval, said Chuck Erickson, community developmen­t manager. The council next meets on Feb. 22.

A Fiduciary executive couldn’t be immediatel­y reached Wednesday for more informatio­n.

The apartments are planned for 7.5 acres on 84 South’s west side.

Fiduciary plans to begin constructi­on by late spring on the first two buildings. That first phase will take around a year to complete.

Cobalt Partners LLC, 84 South’s commercial developer, is building a 58,000-square-foot Steinhafel­s furniture store, a 115,000-square-foot building with eight stores and anchored by Fresh Thyme Farmers Market, and a 9,000-square-foot building for a Portillo’s restaurant.

Cobalt plans to eventually develop more than 315,000 square feet of stores and restaurant­s, and office space and a fitness facility totaling 150,000 square feet.

The city is spending $10 million to help the developers finance 84 South and up to $19.7 million on new streets, sewers, water mains and other public improvemen­ts at the site.

The $115 million developmen­t’s new property taxes will pay back those funds, and interest, by 2037, according to the city’s estimate.

 ?? JLA ARCHITECTS ?? A developer has downsized the apartments planned for Greenfield's 84 South mixed-use project by reducing the buildings from four stories to three stories.
JLA ARCHITECTS A developer has downsized the apartments planned for Greenfield's 84 South mixed-use project by reducing the buildings from four stories to three stories.

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