Water Street Redevelopment Area

The Water Street Redevelopment area is a 32-acre, City-owned site adjacent to Historic Downtown Ypsilanti, between Ann Arbor and Detroit Metro Airport (DTW). The site is bounded on the north by 1500 feet of Michigan Avenue frontage (US-12 Business Route), and on the south and west by 1/2 mile of Huron River frontage. The City of Ypsilanti is currently seeking a developer for the site or several developers for portions of the site.

Water Street Ad Hoc Committee

The City of Ypsilanti has established an Ad Hoc Water Street Redevelopment Area Community Benefits Committee. Meetings will begin soon.

2025 Community Engagement

Those who are unable to attend any of our community engagement sessions are encouraged to fill out the Water Street Community Engagement Survey: https://cityofypsilanti.com/waterstreetsurvey

Video Recordings

Real Estate Panel September 22, 2025 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qp5YRr96SR0&t=7s

The History of Water Street April 16, 2025 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8cgnOAPAZw

Brownfield Redevelopment and Water Street April 23, 2025 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVl5YnvGQg0

The Future of Water Street May 1, 2025 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLMwJBWxCHw



2025 Community Engagement Session Findings

In the spring of 2025 and then later that fall, the City of Ypsilanti along with Carlisle/Wortman Associates hosted first four sessions discussing Water Street followed by four additional focus groups seeking community input on the future of Water Street. The first three sessions were panels on the History of Water Street, Brownfield Development and Water Street, and The Future of Water Street. The final four Focus Groups were to gather additional public input on the future of Water Street. Participants were asked about their hopes and fears and needs and wants for future development on the site. The tables below show the common themes from all five groups discussing the future. You can find a detailed report from the first focus group here. For details from the groups in the fall, see the report here.  The feedback from participants will help the City of Ypsilanti draft a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) to find a developer(s) to redevelop the site.

HOPES AND FEARS

Hopes

Fears

Mixed income mixed use development

Displace minority populations

Riverfront remains open to the public

Unaffordable

Community and recreation center

The site continues to sit empty

Preserve trees/open space

Suburban style development

Small businesses

Auto-oriented

Affordable housing

Low density/single-use structures

Be an extension of downtown and look and feel like Ypsi

 

Recognize the Indigenous populations that were once on site

 

Transit oriented / walkable

 


 NEEDS AND WANTS

Needs

In between

Wants

Dense, mixed-use neighborhood as an extension of downtown

Space for small/micro-businesses

Recreation

Affordable housing

Public recreation indoor/outdoor

Green space/parks

Trails and Walkability

Communal space

Retail/Entertainment venues/theaters

The space along the river should remain public

 

Fits the character of the city

Affordable and mixed housing (low to high)

 

Restaurant/Café overlooking river

Tax-generating

 

Green development standards

Connection to surrounding neighborhoods

 

 

Transit oriented/Walkable

 

 


 

General Site Information

To date, the City of Ypsilanti has performed property acquisition and assessment and completed demolition. Remediation continues using various Michigan and Federal grants and loan programs, Neighborhood Stabilization Funds (NSP), and municipal bonds.

Brownfield Plan

The Washtenaw County Brownfield Redevelopment Authority has approved a Brownfield plan for the site with an estimated total of $22.9 million in reimbursable costs. Contamination remains on the site, but mitigation can be reimbursed through Brownfield Tax Increment Financing (see below).

Redevelopment Goals

The community would like to see the site redeveloped in a mixed-use, urban form that is in keeping with the adjacent historic downtown area and neighborhoods. A biking and walking trail connects Riverside Park to the north with Waterworks Park to the south, serving as part of a 37-mile-long trail running through Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, and adjacent communities.

The following 2010 aerial image shows the redevelopment area; however, no structures remain on the site.

Water Street Redevelopment Area Aerial Map

Property Layout

Environmental Conditions