sun and news 4-17-2021

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The Sun and News, Saturday, April 17, 2021/ Page 3

Middleville hires consultant to seek historic designation for depot


Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
The Middleville Village
Council Tuesday approved
the hiring of a consultant to
work with the village on an
effort to have its 119-year-
old train depot be designated
as a national historic site.
The council unanimously
approved hiring Mannik
Smith Group, based in
Maumee, Ohio, with a
Michigan office in the Detroit
suburb of Canton, at a cost of
$9,700 to work on the appli-
cation to have the depot
included in the National Park
Service’s National Register
of Historic Places.
The council in February
had authorized Village
Manager Patricia Rayl to put
together bid specifications to
get a consultant who was
skilled in historic preserva-
tion, to stabilize and preserve
the exterior of the depot and
also make improvements to
the building’s interior. Two
companies responded to the


village’s request for propos-
als for the project.
Built in 1902, the depot
was a stop on the Michigan
Central Railroad’s Jackson-
to-Grand Rapids line. The
village acquired the depot in
May 2017 from Thornapple
Township.
Getting the depot on the
National Register would
open up options for funding
restoration of the depot, Rayl
said.
“It allows us to have
access to a wider variety of
grants, so that we can actual-
ly work on the inside, restor-
ing that [interior],” she said.
“It’s going to need a little bit
of cleanup, a little bit of
tweaking. For example, the
restrooms should be brought
up to [Americans with
Disabilities Act] standards,
so we’re probably going to
have to do a little bit of con-
struction there. But the heart
of the depot will remain the
same.”
A Hastings-based preser-

vation company, Vintage
Building and Restoration, put
together an estimate for the
village in August 2020 of
what the renovation could
cost, putting the potential
price tag at $40,500. That
estimate, according to village
documents, included repair-
ing copper gutters; repairing,
reglazing and repainting win-
dows; exterior cleaning of
the masonry and re-bricking
as needed; repair and repaint
the eaves and exterior trim;
and installing a handicap-ac-
cessible ramp with a metal
hand rail.
Founded in 1994, Mannik
Smith Group has worked
successfully to get recogni-
tion on the National Register
of Historic Places for several
Michigan sites, including the
Boys Club building in Battle
Creek, the Fidelity Building
in Benton Harbor and the
water treatment plant in
Marine City, which was a
federal Works Progress
Administration project,

according to the company’s
application.
A three-member historic
preservation team will visit
the State Historic
Preservation Office, the State
Library and State Archives to
search for relevant historic
information tied to the depot.
The team also is expected to
visit the University of
Michigan’s Bentley Library,
where the records of the
Michigan Central Railroad
Company are maintained.
“We anticipate that our
research will focus primarily
on this collection. Local his-
torical societies and libraries
will be contacted to deter-
mine their collections,” Brian
Geer, chief operations officer
for Mannik Smith Group,
wrote in the application to
the village. “Attempts will be
made to contact knowledge-
able informants identified by
these institutions, by
research, and by other local
contacts. Data from these
combined resources will pro-

vide detailed information
useful in determining the sig-
nificance of the railroad in
Middleville’s history and
development. The objective
of the research will be to
identify the period of con-
struction, historical chronol-
ogy, and the building’s phys-
ical evolution.”
The village got positive
references for Mannik Smith
Group from Okemos and
Tecumseh, Rayl said.
The proposed project
timeline calls for a final draft
of the village’s application to
be made to the State Historic
Preservation Office by
mid-July, a presentation to
the village council in

mid-August, and completion
by the end of the year,
according to the company’s
application.
Council Trustee Ed
Schellinger, who made the
motion to approve the hiring
of Mannik Smith Group, said
getting the depot on the
National Register would
bring visitors to the village.
“You would be surprised
at the number of retired rail-
road people that do nothing
more than drive around the
country looking for a project
like this,” Schellinger said.
“When we get our name in
the national registry book,
Middleville will be on their
planned itinerary.”

Yankee Springs planners approve


new site for pickleball courts
Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
Pickleball enthusiasts in
Yankee Springs Township
will soon have a new place to
play – and can treat them-
selves to ice cream after-
ward.
The township planning
commission Thursday night
unanimously approved a site
plan and special land-use
permit that will allow for six
new pickleball courts to be
built on property on the east-
ern portion of the Curley
Cone restaurant and ice
cream shop on M-179.
“We could not be more
excited and enthusiastic
about the project, and I could
not be happier with the
amount of support that
Yankee Springs Township
has shown us,” Curley Cone
owner Julie Fox said in a
telephone shortly after the
meeting.
The passage of the site
plan for the pickleball courts
came three months after the
township board voted to
allow additional pickleball
courts at Yankee Springs
Township Park. However,
that approval set forth ground
rules that included requiring
the township to be responsi-
ble for all aspects of the proj-
ect, including the hiring of
the contractors and determin-

ing how funds raised by the
Promote Pickleball Team
would be spent. The citi-
zen-based group – which has
been working to expand
pickleball courts at the town-
ship park for more than two
years – had offered to raise
$100,000 to pay for the con-
struction of the courts.
PPT representatives, who
said they had their own con-
tractors ready in place to
build additional courts at the
park, considered the town-
ship’s conditions a
deal-breaker and decided to
pursue other options.
“I want to acknowledge
that Julie is willing to put
pickleball courts on her prop-
erty,” PPT representative
Phyllis Wordhouse said
during Thursday’s public
hearing. “This has been a
19-month process for us, and
the township itself asked us
to look for a business owner
who would be willing to
work with us, partner with

us. I hope this is going to be
successful tonight, because
we don’t want to wait 20
months. We’ve had over 10
meetings with the township.”
Concerns were raised
about an easement to the
nearby township water tower.
“This is a vital water
main. It connects the water
tower to the distribution line
and M-179,” said Don
DeVries, an engineer at Fleis
& Vandenbrink.
“We currently don’t use
the easement for ingress and
egress, we actually use the
driveway,” said Trustee
Larry Knowles, who is the
township board’s representa-
tive on the planning commis-
sion. “I’d like to think that
would still stay in effect.”
An earlier site plan for
Curley Cone proposed con-
struction of a deck over the
easement area, which raised
a concern for DeVries.
Planning commissioner
Frank Fiala praised the pro-
posal, calling it “fantastic.”
“From looking at this site
plan and the planning that
has gone in here and all the
things that Julie has done at
that facility, I think it’s just
outstanding,” Fiala said. “It’s
an example of what we
would like people to do, to
accommodate the pickleball,
the activities and the things

that she’s doing. I just
applaud that.”
The board agreed to
waive landscaping and buff-
ering requirements for the
project.
No timetable for con-
struction of the courts has
been determined.

SATURDAY, APRIL 24|NOON-5PM


DOWNTOWN MIDDLEVILLE


PROUDLY


PRESENTS


EXPLORE THE PAUL HENRY TRAIL AND HISTORIC,
DOWNTOWN MIDDLEVILLE BY PARTICIPATING IN THE
SPRING SAFARI & TRIVIA QUEST! CHECK IN AT THE GAZEBO
FROM NOON-5PM FOR YOUR SAFARI PASSPORT, MAP,
AND ADVENTURE GEAR. SOLVE ALL THE CLUES
TO BE ENTERED IN A DRAWING FOR A GRAND PRIZE BASKET!

PLUS, DON’T MISS THE SIDEWALK CHALK ART COMPETITION PLUS, DON’T MISS THE SIDEWALK CHALK ART COMPETITION
STARTING AT THE PAVILION AND CONTINUING ON THE
NORTH SIDE OF THE TRAIL, THE FREE PLANT EXCHANGE
AND VENDOR FAIR AT THE PAVILION, OR THE
OUTDOOR KARAOKE (3-5 PM AT THE DDA AMPHITHEATRE).

FOLLOW OUR FACEBOOK PAGE FOR ALL THE EVENT DETAILS
AND UPDATES @MIDDLEVILLEDDA.

JOIN US FOR A FUN-FILLED DAY


THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL ENJOY!


284 N BRIGGS ROAD - MIDDLEVILLE, MICHIGAN 49333
269-795-9091 / FAX 269-795-

158695

YANKEE SPRINGS TOWNSHIP


SPRING


CLEANUP DAY


Saturday, April 24, 2021


9:00 AM start @ the Fire Station
1425 S. Payne Lake Rd.
Please come and join us in cleaning along the roads in the
township with a special emphasis on the old shooting range.
A dumpster for trash collected will be provided along
with trash bags.
Please call the Township office with any questions 269-
795-9091.


Frederic Jacobs • Publisher & CEO
Hank Schuuring • CFO

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“I think it’s just
outstanding. It’s an
example of what
we would like
people to do ...”
Frank Fiala,
planning commissioner
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