Another 100-year-old house moved to Muskegon’s Historic In-Fill District

Muskegon’s proposed new townhomes and condos have competitor—century-old homes moved from other parts of the city to become part of a city-made Historic In-Fill District.

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Muskegon’s proposed new townhomes and condos have competitor—century-old homes moved from other parts of the city to become part of a city-made Historic In-Fill District. The most recent addition to the district brings the number of moved homes to ten.

According to excerpts from the story:

Residents of Nelson Place Apartments on Muskegon Avenue looked on with interest as their new neighbor — and his house — moved in across the street Wednesday. “Are you going to have an open house?” asked one.

“Absolutely!” said Kevin Eden, the hundred-and-something-year-old house’s twenty-something owner.

Eden, an architectural designer, had been looking forward to this day to be over for some time, yet he needn’t have worried. Deitz Movers and Engineers made it look easy. Which it wasn’t.

Read the complete story here.

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