business continued from page 52 “The competition between Jewish developers and builders in our market is respectful and friendly and built on long-standing trust.” — JIM GALBRAITH Beverly Plan at the Reserve of Beverly Crest their father retired. “To explain a little history — after the war, a lot of the Jewish refugees here became paint- ers, carpenters and plumbers to make a living, and we all worked together very tight knit in the building industry,” said Shapiro, an award- winning real estate developer since 1973. “These relationships began with my father’s generation and continue within many compa- nies. We stick together, and we’ve helped each other succeed.” Galbraith agrees, “The competition between the Jewish developers and builders in our mar- ket is respectful and friendly and built on long- standing trust. Competitors will often partner together where there is a mutual advantage based on the scale of the development, prod- uct mix or marketing.” SHEARWATER APARTMENT HOMES Orchard Plan at the Reserve of Beverly Crest Walnut Plan at the Reserve of Beverly Crest For more information: Home Builder’s Association of Southeastern Michigan 2075 Walnut Lake Road West Bloomfi eld, MI 48323 (248) 789-8480 www.builders.org One such new collaboration — the first in the location in over a decade — is ShearWater Apartment Homes, a $30-million community created by M. Shapiro Real Estate and MJC Companies at the intersection of Maple and Beck roads in Commerce Township. MJC Companies’ principal Michael J. Chirco said, “ShearWater is our response to the grow- ing market of upscale singles, couples and families seeking apartments with the spacious- ness, premium features and refined architec- ture they are used to seeing in luxury homes and condominiums in our area.” Shapiro added, “The units located in the heart of Oakland County’s lake district offer spacious floor plans, each including two or three bedrooms, two baths, two-car attached garage and personal out door space. “And with 9-foot ceilings and full-height glass door walls that create an amazing open feeling, these 1,600- to 1,800-square-foot apart- ments are unlike any other in the area.” ShearWater showcases premium interior details, including planked wood-grain flooring, stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, and in-residence washers and dryers. Their design begins at the lush entry bou- levard and continues to the community club- house with a fireside lounge, galley kitchen, business center, state-of-the-art fitness center and locker rooms. Outside, residents can enjoy a resort-class pool, spa and four-season lanai with a huge fireplace. “Oakland County’s high-end market segment has been waiting for a product like this for some time,” Shapiro said. “ShearWater’s size, absolute A-plus location and elevated design are beyond any other apartments you’ll find in the region.” THE RESERVE OF BEVERLY CREST Another residential community — The Reserve of Beverly Crest by AP Builders — will include 11 54 May 3 • 2018 jn tree-lined homesites in West Bloomfield at the Maple and Orchard Lake corridor. The principals of AP Builders, Steve Perlman and Pete Alshab, have been in the home-building industry for more than 50 combined years. Together, they merged their talents and established AP Builders in 2014. Bloomfield Hills resident Perlman, 59, whose father, Sanford Perlman, was in the industry, is also a founding principal of Ivanhoe-Huntley Homes, a land development and top-five Michigan home builder in the area since 2006. “There hasn’t been any new housing development in this prime area for more than 10 years, so we are excited to offer these luxury homes at what I like to call ‘Main at Main’ — Orchard Lake Road and Maple Road, the heart of everything,” Perlman said. “You’ll have Steve Perlman walkable access to shops at Orchard Mall, Boardwalk, restaurants and recre- ation — something many people really want.” The upscale homes are 3,000- to 3,400-square- feet and include a grand entry, two-story great room, 9-foot ceilings, state-of- the-art kitchen with an oversized island and prep areas, and a spacious master suite. COMMITMENT TO THEIR COMMUNITY Both Shapiro and Perlman give back to the Jewish community in philanthropic ways, including contributing to the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills. “Mickey has also been appointed to the executive council of the USC Shoah Foundation, headed by Steven Spielberg, whose goal is to record and archive testimoni- als of Holocaust survivors for public viewing,” said Frank Roth of Lautrec Ltd. “And he was appointed to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., by President George W. Bush in 2007.” Shapiro is also a board member of the Jewish Hospice and Chaplaincy Network in West Bloomfield and active at Congregation Beth Ahm in Bloomfield Township. Perlman is a supporter of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit and JARC and an active member at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield. Howard Fingeroot, area president of M/I Homes of Michigan, has been in the residential homebuilding and development business in Southeast Michigan for close to 25 years, and is close with his Jewish peers in the industry. Most of them are seasoned in the business, he says, and “the best at what they do.” He is currently a busi- ness partner with Shapiro in a development in West Bloomfield called Legacy Woods. “As a whole, Jewish Howard Fingeroot builders and developers are strongly connected, and I expect we will continue to be leaders in the building industry,” Fingeroot said. •