Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

River 1 developmen­t

- CHUNG ARCHITECTU­RE that’s Tom Daykin can be emailed tdaykin@jrn.com and followed Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. RINKA at on

largest industrial developmen­t at an urban site, Developmen­t Commission­er Rocky Marcoux told committee members.

City financing for the $285 million Komatsu developmen­t could eventually total $40 million.

Komatsu in September announced plans to relocate its manufactur­ing operations now based at 4400 W. National Ave., West Milwaukee, as well as corporate offices at Honey Creek Corporate Center, 135 S. 84th St., on Milwaukee’s far west side.

The new corporate campus would be on a 52-acre site overlookin­g the inner harbor at the end of East Greenfield Avenue. That includes a city-owned site and the former Milwaukee Solvay Coke Co. property.

Komatsu hopes to break ground by fall 2019 and begin using the buildings in 2021, said John Koetz, Komatsu’s president of surface mining.

The company expects to have 598 employees at the Harbor District site by 2023, according to a contract between Komatsu and the city.

The city’s annual payments to Komatsu would total $18.2 million by 2034 — if the company has 946 employees by that year, according to that agreement. The annual payments would be proportion­ately reduced by around $19,000 for each job that falls short.

Those annual payments could eventually total $25 million — if Komatsu creates 1,300 jobs in the long term.

Also, the city would spend $15 million to build a public RiverWalk and other public improvemen­ts. The RiverWalk would extend from the end of East Greenfield Avenue up the Kinnickinn­ic River to South Kinnickinn­ic Avenue.

Komatsu’s initial phase will feature 170,000 square feet of office space, a 500-stall parking structure, 410,000 square feet of manufactur­ing space and a 20,000-square-foot museum and training building.

Those buildings are expected to total an estimated $64.4 million in new property values. Komatsu’s corporate campus could eventually total 2.5 million square feet.

The zoning committee voted 4-1 to endorse the financing plan, with Ald. Robert Bauman opposed.

Bauman is concerned that Komatsu’s initial job count in 2023 would equal around 11 jobs per acre. He called that “pathetic” for a “prime piece of real estate.”

The city’s goal is to create 18 to 25 jobs per acre. That would be achieved by 2034 under the company’s growth plans.

Bauman said the Harbor District land and water use plan included a vision for office buildings, with much higher job counts, at the Komatsu site.

“Now, developmen­t, in my humble opinion,” Bauman said.

Marcoux said those plans were conceptual, while Komatsu’s proposal was “a reality.”

City financing for the $49 million River 1 developmen­t would total $7.1 million.

Brownsvill­e-based utilities and infrastruc­ture contractor Michels Corp. in August announced its plans to develop River 1 west of South First Street and north of West Becher Street overlookin­g the Kinnickinn­ic River. It is the site of the former Horny Goat Hideaway tavern.

The developmen­t’s first phase will feature an eight-story building, with around 130,000 square feet that Michels would eventually anchor with up to 400 employees; a 1,000-space parking structure; and a RiverWalk.

Michels hopes to begin constructi­on of the first phase within 90 days, said Dave Stegeman, chief legal officer and vice president of mergers/acquisitio­ns and real estate. He said other businesses are considerin­g moving to the first office building.

That phase would be completed by summer 2020, and have an initial assessed value of $23.3 million.

The proposed city financing package would include $3.4 million to pay for 70 percent of the RiverWalk and $2.5 million to make improvemen­ts to Becher Street. Additional costs include an environmen­tal cleanup.

River 1’s additional buildings could eventually include two more office buildings, each with 50,000 square feet; an apartment building with around 120 units and a restaurant on the ground floor; and a hotel with roughly 120 rooms, according to conceptual plans.

With those additional buildings, River 1 would total over $100 million.

The zoning committee voted 5-0 to endorse the River 1 financing plan.

 ??  ?? The River 1 mixed-use developmen­t, anchored by Michels Corp.’s Milwaukee-area offices, would help redevelop the city’s Harbor District.
The River 1 mixed-use developmen­t, anchored by Michels Corp.’s Milwaukee-area offices, would help redevelop the city’s Harbor District.

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