-W 9 70 0 EMMA NOLAN-ABRAHAMIAN/Daily The Willow Run plant has been producing automotive and aeronautical parts since 1941. Surviving and Thriving GM's Willow Run plant stays strong in the face of adversity By James V. Dowd / Daily Staff Writer more dormitories and votes for anti- student measures like residential park- ing permit programs. Students grow even more annoyed at the whole situa- tion and the city of Ann Arbor. How can the rampant rents be reined? Sensible urban planning enabled by students' political par- ticipation. In simple economic terms, there is not enough housing for the demand. Students generally want to live near campus, which more or less means low-rise apartment buildings, houses, or converted apartment hous- es. The University is expanding almost without pause, meaning more housing consumers for a more or less finite number of units (keep in mind that the population of the city as a whole is slowly grow- ing, too). If the housing market were function- Sens ing normally, real estate stu developers would be building new units to satisfy that demand. Ann Arbor, however, is not Gradua a normally functioning market. Developers who want to build new units in a number of price ranges are stymied and smacked down by preservationists and neighborhood associations. Even when they put together a proposal that makes economic sense, satisfies Ann Arbor's values on affordable housing and combines retail with commercial and residential uses, people who are afraid of tall buildings flex their politi- cal muscle and drive off proposals that would increase the city's housing supply. Next time you're at Angelo's Restaurant, take a look at the defunct gas station on Glen Street. Thanks to the Historic District Commission, that will remain an eyesore rather than a mixed-use ten-story building for the foreseeable future. The city has to continue to develop new housing units, not just for stu- dents but as part of a broad effort to provide housing to the poor, the work- ing class, students, young profession- als, baby boomers and empty nesters. Market studies show people want to live downtown, people want to live in more affordable units, and people want to live in areas of higher den- sity with a vibrant local economy and active street life. Main Street doesn't have to be deserted Sunday through Thursday after 10 p.m. Given some simple urban design guidelines, new construction can satisfy demand for living downtown without sacrific- ing the streetscape many people love about downtown Ann Arbor. In addition to developing new units downtown and near campus, the city can start developing satellite busi- ness and residential districts. Almost any other city of Ann Arbor's size or larger has more than one node of activity. Because Tree Town had little industry in the 20th century, and in fact, only had a population of about 30,000 in 1930, we lack the real estate and neighborhood distribution of other cities. If we were to build some mixed-use neighborhoods at a distance from the downtown area, we could offer more than one option for those who want to live in an "urban" area. People should have more than just one choice of where to live if they- want to be within walking distance of a grocery store or a coffee shop and bookstore. In addition to increas- ing desirable housing supply, having these options will also relieve some of the pressure on the campus-downtown area, particularly if it is served by bus (or is near the potential Detroit-Ann' Arbor rail line). Just think - if you1 could live 3 miles from campus, pay1 $300 a bedroom, still be able to walkJ to restaurants, bars and clothing stores] and could get to campus in eight min-1 utes on an express bus, you'd jump at the chance, wouldn't you? There's no good reason that you can't now - the; city's archaic development process and the opposition of neighborhood; groups have been the main obstacles,1 can the rampant rents be ible urban planning enab dents' political participat -D te Student, Architecture and Urba though outdated concepts of a car-lov- ing public still persist (even though Ann Arbor's reputation for walking and biking are clearly well deserved). I've mostly been talking about pri- vate market solutions to the student housing problem, but public and non- profit institutions have a role to play, too. First, let me clear up the miscon- ception that the University is at fault because they haven't built any dorms in 30 years. The University of Michi- gan is an educational institution, not a residential one. The University has no obligation to provide housing for its students, except as it feels is nec- essary to support the educational mis- sion of the University. If that means living-learning communities, faculty housing developments, or demonstra- tion projects, that's fine. However, just because the University is bring- ing people to Ann Arbor doesn't mean it has to house them. No one expects Pfizer, Arbortext or the city govern- ment to house its employees, though many of them came to Ann Arbor specifically for employment; neither should we expect that of the Univer- sity for their students. The lion's share of on-campus stu- dent housing was built in a brief 30 year period, from the 1930s to the 1960s, with substantial aid from the federal government. East Quad and West Quad Residence. Halls were built with Works Progress Adminis- tration grants during the Depression; Markley, Bursley, the Baitses and the Northwoods residences were financed by the federal government after World War II in a lending program enabling colleges to house the influx of veter- ans and the baby boomers. Ironically, college presidents 1 egged the federal government for this program because the private market, which had the tra- ditional responsibil- reined? ity to build housing reined? couldn't deal with all led by the veterans coming ". w ion. to college on the GI Bill, followed by the boomers in later years. ale Winling Now people think that in Planning everyone should live in a dorm because they did when they were in college, even though University Towers is a high-rise apar 158 years of university history indi- versity Avenue. cates the trend has almost always been in the opposite direction. Groups like cooperatives and non- profit developers can also help drive this process. Co-ops started at the Uni- versity in the Depression to help ease the burden of housing costs; that mis- sion is just as relevant now and they, too, should be building new units in Ann Arbor. Non-profits, because they can qualify for subsidies and have less of a tax burden and profit motive than for-profit developers, can afford to be more creative in their financing, their designs and their planning. Private builders shouldn't have a monopoly on development. None of these ideas are revolution- ary - almost any other sizeable city you travel to will already exhibit these characteristics. However, Ann Arbor has been a small, parochial town for some time now and many people don't see a need to change. Students have to get as involved in local politics as they do in state and national issues if there's going to be any noticeable change. You Business senior John David Carson can bet the rent check on that. light bulb in his house on Church St t's easy to look at the automotive industry, especially in Michigan, .. and cringe. Foreign automakers are slowly surpassing the Big Three, suppliers are going bankrupt and jobs are disappearing into thin air almost daily. Michigan's pride and joy has entered a downward spiral with no end in sight. But a beacon of hope has appeared in the most unlikely of places - a small part of Ypsilanti known as Willow Run. Willow Run is home to the Gen- eral Motors Powertrain plant, where the automaker produces transmissions for many of its production vehicles. In recent years, the addition of a new six- speed transmission has helped save the Willow Run plant. As factories else- where are continuing to downsize or close completely, the Powertrain plant has kept its head above water, preserv- ing one of Michigan's historical land- marks. A flying start A glance at the history of the General Motors Powertrain plant helps illustrate the significance of the Willow Run location. As the United States entered into World War II, there was an increasing need for factories that could construct The plant is five million square feet and one mile long from front to.back. - Kingsley Wootton Willow Run Plant Manager various war machines, especially air- craft. Assembly-line pioneer Henry Ford - knowing that he had the mechanical expertise and a tract of land near Ann Arbor - sold his farm to the govern- ment so that his Ford Motor Company could construct a B-24 bomber - more commonly know as the "Liberator". During the next five years, Ford man- ufactured some 8,000 of these planes, which were dispatched to the Euro- pean theater and played a key role in the defeat of the Axis powers. But once victory was complete, Ford no longer needed the plant in Willow Run and began looking to sell the massive estab- lishment. While the automotive industry in Detroit was budding, Willow Run seemed out of the way in the 1940s. Remodeling into an auto plant would be a very involved project. "The plant is five million square feet and one mile long from front to back," said current plant manager Kingsley Wootton. "And the floor is sloped one- half degree so that the bombers could be easily pushed down the facility. This area is as long as 110 football fields." Willow Run was purchased by auto- motive moguls Henry Kaiser and Joseph Frazer at the end of the war. Kaiser's company built their cars there until 1953 when they moved their operation to Ohio after a merger. The plant might have been empty once more, but cir- cumstance brought the beginning of the General Motors era at the plant. "In 1953, Detroit Transmission pro- duced transmissions for GM," Wootton said. "Their plant in Livonia burned down and they transferred production from Livonia to Willow Run." Since Detroit $ Transmission moved out to Willow Run, the General Motors operation flourished. But the sentimen- tal value of a building with such a long history is not enough to keep it running. When many General Motors plants were closing and downsizing in the early part of this decade, a new product allowed the Willow Run plant to maintain its workforce. New product, same results While many people know General Motors' final products, few know much about their components. At Willow Run, General Motors produces a wide range of transmissions. "There are multiple plants within one site," Wootton said. "We have the Wil- low Run transmission operation that produces a rear-wheel drive heavy duty transmission and a front-wheel drive heavy duty transmission. There is also a component site that produces compo- nents for other GM transmissions that are produced at other sites." But as General Motors' stock plum- meted in recent years, demand for the automakers' vehicles also fell. This might have spelled doom for the Wil- low Run plant, but the plant's;efficiency caught the eye of General Motors' deci- sion makers, and the operation was awarded a new product. "About two years ago, we were awarded the new six-speed, rear-wheel drive transmission," Wootton said. "This was awarded based on performance See WILLOW RUN, page 12B Headaches? Michigan HeadoPain & Neuroloa conducting an in-clinic research s investigational medication for mig Participants must be 18 to 65 yea 6 headaches per month. A total c .h are required. Visit 2 is a four- to f visit while having an acute heada be available to come to the clinic during normal business hours (8 You may be compensated up to $350 for your time and travel. Foi please call a study coordinator. Michigan bead*Pain & Neurological Institu Joel R. Saper, M.D., F.A.C.P., Director 3120 Professional Drive, Ann Arbor, MI* (734) 677-6( 4B - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 12, 2006 The Michigan Da