From
the Daily Tribune - A cut of the action By Catherine Kavanaugh Daily
Tribune Staff Writer PUBLISHED: March 14, 2005 Historic bank building
ready for proposed beauty school ROYAL OAK The renovation of a former
downtown bank building is nearing completion and a new tenant is waiting in the
wings for city approval to open a cosmetology school and day spa. The $4
million makeover of the city's only Greek Revival building could be followed by
the makeovers of Oakland County residents as Scott Weaver, co-owner and president
of Douglas J. Aveda Institute, envisions his third location at the corner of Main
and Fourth streets. The institute provides students in Ann Arbor and Lansing
with a learning environment that emulates upscale salons and customers get all
the pampering at a reduced price. The site plan for Royal Oak calls for one large
retail area for Aveda products, three classrooms, four spas, nine manicure/pedicure
stations and 24 hair styling and coloring stations. Students also will give facials,
hair waxings and massages. Building owner David Strosberg is optimistic
he is finally dealing with the right tenant after five years. National chain stores
expressed interest in the stately building with ornate columns until lease talks
covered historic issues with display windows and the challenge of turning the
old bank vault into usable space. In 2003, a restaurant called Small Plates
won city approval and the city's 48th liquor license but the operators
couldn't get the financing to make it happen. Buffalo Wild Wings Grill and Bar
tried last year, but a different City Commission denied the liquor license in
a 4-2 vote, saying the downtown doesn't need another business serving alcohol. The
Plan Commission will have the final say on the Douglas J. Aveda Institute on April
12 because no liquor license is involved. In the meantime, Strosberg is finalizing
the lease terms. "They really want a Detroit-area presence," he
said of Weaver and his partner. "They're looking for younger demographics
and an active area and Royal Oak fits that." If plan commissioners
OK the new building use, about $1 million of interior work will start to prepare
the space for the salon, Strosberg said. He is pleased with preservation
steps taken to date, including a new roof, flashing to make the building water
tight, tuck pointing, relocating the entrance to its original location and shipping
out the clock for repair. "It's night and day compared to what it was,"
Strosberg said. Contractors also discovered the original lettering of Royal
Oak Savings Bank under some false facade. previous
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