3687 Fort Street (Wyandotte, Michigan): Difference between revisions

From Bluepages, the global historical directory
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 3: Line 3:
| name = 3687 Fort Street
| name = 3687 Fort Street
| image = File:3687 Fort Street Wyandotte MI 2020.JPG
| image = File:3687 Fort Street Wyandotte MI 2020.JPG
| former_names =
| former_names = Goebel Brewing Warehouse, Great Lakes Transit Wyandotte Garage, SEMTA Wyandotte Terminal, Auto One, People's Choice Auto Maintenance & Repair, All American Auto Clinic, Downriver Auto Works, Crime Ring Kustoms
| building_type = Vacant commercial building (former automotive repair shop)
| building_type = Commercial building
| location = 3687 [[Fort Street (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Fort Street]]<br/>[[Wyandotte, Michigan|Wyandotte]], [[Michigan]]
| location = 3687 [[Fort Street (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Fort Street]]<br/>[[Wyandotte, Michigan|Wyandotte]], [[Michigan]]
| start_date = 1949
| start_date = 1949
Line 12: Line 12:
| developer =
| developer =
}}
}}
'''3687 Fort Street''' is a vacant commercial building at the northeast corner of [[Fort Street (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Fort Street]] and [[Orchard Street (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Orchard Street]] in [[Wyandotte, Michigan|Wyandotte]], [[Michigan]]. Built to house a [[Goebel Brewing Company]] warehouse in 1949, it was later repurposed into a bus garage and subsequently housed several automotive repair shops after a stint as a repossessed car lot.
'''3687 Fort Street''' is a vacant commercial building at the northeast corner of [[Fort Street (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Fort Street]] and [[Orchard Street (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Orchard Street]] in [[Wyandotte, Michigan|Wyandotte]], [[Michigan]]. Built to house a [[Goebel Brewing Company]] warehouse in 1949, it was later repurposed into a truck rental agency before becoming a bus garage and subsequently housed several automotive repair shops after a stint as a repossessed car lot.
==History==
==History==
The building was originally built in 1949 to house a distribution warehouse for the [[Goebel Brewing Company]] of [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]]. The warehouse remained active into at least 1956, though it ceased to be a warehouse by 1964, when Goebel was acquired by rival brewer [[Stroh Brewery Company]].
The building was originally built in 1949 to house a distribution warehouse for the [[Goebel Brewing Company]] of [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]]. The warehouse remained active into at least 1956, though by 1960 it had become an American Truck Rental office.


[[Great Lakes Transit Corporation]], the public transit provider in the city of Wyandotte, soon acquired the building for use as a bus garage, replacing an older garage at [[Biddle Avenue (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Biddle Avenue]] and [[Pennsylvania Road (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Pennsylvania Road]]. The garage was transferred to the [[Southeastern Michigan Transportation Authority]] (SEMTA) upon its acquisition of Great Lakes Transit on April 1, 1974, though SEMTA reassigned what it had renamed the Wyandotte Terminal into its [[Metropolitan Transit (Dearborn, Michigan)|Metropolitan Transit]] division (for the past few years, Metropolitan had already operated bus routes along the portion of Fort Street that this building is located on that were continued by SEMTA).<ref>Motor Coach Age, October-December 2003, page 5.</ref> SEMTA closed the Wyandotte Terminal in 1981, replacing it with a smaller, leased garage at [[13400 Reeck Road (Southgate, Michigan)|13400 Reeck Road]] in [[Southgate, Michigan|Southgate]].<ref>Motor Coach Age, October-December 2003, page 14.</ref>
[[Great Lakes Transit Corporation]], the public transit provider in the city of Wyandotte, soon acquired the building for use as a bus garage, replacing an older garage at [[Biddle Avenue (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Biddle Avenue]] and [[Pennsylvania Road (Wyandotte, Michigan)|Pennsylvania Road]]. The garage was transferred to the [[Southeastern Michigan Transportation Authority]] (SEMTA) upon its acquisition of Great Lakes Transit on April 1, 1974, though SEMTA reassigned what it had renamed the Wyandotte Terminal into its [[Metropolitan Transit (Dearborn, Michigan)|Metropolitan Transit]] division (for the past few years, Metropolitan had already operated bus routes along the portion of Fort Street that this building is located on that were continued by SEMTA).<ref>Motor Coach Age, October-December 2003, page 5.</ref> SEMTA closed the Wyandotte Terminal in 1981, replacing it with a smaller, leased garage at [[13400 Reeck Road (Southgate, Michigan)|13400 Reeck Road]] in [[Southgate, Michigan|Southgate]].<ref>Motor Coach Age, October-December 2003, page 14.</ref>

Revision as of 19:42, 6 January 2021

Coordinates: 42°11′40″N 83°10′46″W / 42.194413°N 83.179530°W / 42.194413; -83.179530

3687 Fort Street
General information
TypeCommercial building
Location3687 Fort Street
Wyandotte, Michigan
Construction started1949
Opened1949
ClosedAugust 27, 2020
OwnerFinazzo Investment Company

3687 Fort Street is a vacant commercial building at the northeast corner of Fort Street and Orchard Street in Wyandotte, Michigan. Built to house a Goebel Brewing Company warehouse in 1949, it was later repurposed into a truck rental agency before becoming a bus garage and subsequently housed several automotive repair shops after a stint as a repossessed car lot.

History

The building was originally built in 1949 to house a distribution warehouse for the Goebel Brewing Company of Detroit. The warehouse remained active into at least 1956, though by 1960 it had become an American Truck Rental office.

Great Lakes Transit Corporation, the public transit provider in the city of Wyandotte, soon acquired the building for use as a bus garage, replacing an older garage at Biddle Avenue and Pennsylvania Road. The garage was transferred to the Southeastern Michigan Transportation Authority (SEMTA) upon its acquisition of Great Lakes Transit on April 1, 1974, though SEMTA reassigned what it had renamed the Wyandotte Terminal into its Metropolitan Transit division (for the past few years, Metropolitan had already operated bus routes along the portion of Fort Street that this building is located on that were continued by SEMTA).[1] SEMTA closed the Wyandotte Terminal in 1981, replacing it with a smaller, leased garage at 13400 Reeck Road in Southgate.[2]

After the Wyandotte Terminal's closure, the property's parking lot was used to store repossessed cars[3] before the building began housing various auto repair shops. In 1995 and 1996, Auto One was located in the building.[4][5] The next tenant, People's Choice Auto Maintenance & Repair, closed in 2006. By 2011, All American Auto Clinic had opened in the building. A Lincoln Park man employed at the shop parked his 2005 Chevrolet vehicle at about 7 a.m. on May 3, 2012, and was notified by a co-worker that its front passenger’s window was broken.[6] All American Auto Clinic closed in 2014. Downriver Auto Works opened at this address on June 25, 2016, though All American Auto Clinic's signs were left untouched.

On June 29, 2018, Crime Ring Kustoms moved into the building. The owner, Patrick Dingman, was charged with falsely reporting a customer's 2019 Ford Transit Van as stolen (at approximately 7:50 a.m. on February 11, 2020[7]) and for concealing it in April 2020, and was further charged with receiving and concealing stolen property on April 19.[8] He was additionally charged with a count of conducting criminal enterprises on August 27, 2020.[9] Crime Ring Kustoms went out of business due to these charges.

References