Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Black chamber has new address, big plans

Move will allow organizati­on to conduct more training

- La Risa R. Lynch

A former mattress storage facility on Milwaukee’s near west side will be the new home of the Wisconsin Black Chamber of Commerce.

The 17-year-old organizati­on purchased the twostory, 25,600-square-foot building at 2900 W. Vliet St. for $400,000, according to the real estate agency Boerke Co.

The chamber had been in the market to purchase a building for some time, and this building became available at the right price, said Ruben Hopkins, the chamber’s CEO and chairman.

The chamber now operates out of a property it rents at 3020 W. Vliet St.

The move will allow the chamber to do more training focused on access to capital and business developmen­t to grow Black entreprene­urs. Hopkins said purchasing the building “aligns with what we stand for as a chamber -- to make Black people the largest employer of Black people.”

The chamber plans to redevelop the property for its office space and 40% of the facility will be used for business incubators and accelerato­rs.

“The future of the nation’s economy rests on the revitaliza­tion of central cities around the country,” Hopkins said adding that Black businesses play a key role in that.

The 1923 building also once housed a metal fabricatio­n shop. The building will not stray away from its manufactur­ing roots. Two tenants will do light manufactur­ing building prefab walls and trusses for home constructi­on.

The chamber purchased the building with funds from a $5 million grant it received from the governor’s office. The funding is part of Gov. Tony Evers’ $1 billion investment to support small businesses and industries hit hard by the pandemic as well as communitie­s that have been historical­ly unable to access capital or credit to recover. The money comes from the American Rescue Plan Act.

The bulk of the $5 million grant will support and seed the chamber’s initiative to create 3,000 new Black-owned businesses in the state by 2024.

“This is more about the example of what can happen when you put funding in the right people’s hands,” Hopkins said.

While he didn’t disclose renovation costs, Hopkins said the purchase of the underutili­zed facility will help revitalize the area.

“The goal is to bring the building back to a standard that we can operate in in an effective manner,” Hopkins said, adding that the building was just “sitting there with a bunch of mattresses in it. Now we are going to change that.”

 ?? ANGELA PETERSON/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Ruben Hopkins, chairman/CEO of the Wisconsin Black Chamber of Commerce at 3020 W. Vliet St., participat­es in a virtual meeting in 2022. The chamber plans to move to a new, larger building a block away.
ANGELA PETERSON/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Ruben Hopkins, chairman/CEO of the Wisconsin Black Chamber of Commerce at 3020 W. Vliet St., participat­es in a virtual meeting in 2022. The chamber plans to move to a new, larger building a block away.
 ?? WISCONSIN HISTORICAL SOCIETY ?? The Wisconsin Black Chamber of Commerce will move to a renovated building at 2900 W. Vliet St.
WISCONSIN HISTORICAL SOCIETY The Wisconsin Black Chamber of Commerce will move to a renovated building at 2900 W. Vliet St.

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