Sidewalk-adjacent news

Sidewalk-adjacent news: they have started clearing trees away for the “Michigan Avenue Rehabilitation” project, which is supposed to improve the Michigan Avenue corridor from Pennsylvania to 127 – in other words, the length of the east side – for pedestrians and bicyclists.

Fans of the blog know I’m inclined toward anything that improves sidewalks. I’m also in favor of bicycle lanes, especially when they mean cyclists won’t be risking collisions with pedestrians on the sidewalk. I get why they ride on the sidewalk, and when I rode my bike I would ride on the sidewalk on Michigan too since the alternative is worse, but I’d still rather not have them scare me by blowing past my shoulder inches away (often without warning as they should).

The trouble is that I’m also generally opposed to anything that involves removing mature trees. The honey locust trees on this stretch are pretty, making for nice shade and pleasant colors. They stand in dedicated little holes in the sidewalk that I’ve always found a bit fascinating. According to the official phasing map, the city is going to replace them one to one – actually better than one to one in some blocks – but a tree that has already had decades to grow is always better than a new planting. I wish they had tried harder to work around them, at least keeping the ones that could be kept.

E. Michigan Ave., ACD, 2023

This is the last of the new stamps I collected while walking back to my car from the Silver Bells 5K race downtown. It’s in front of the former Troppo restaurant, now apparently something called “The Gov.” It’s on the north side of East Michigan Avenue between Washington and Grand.

I assume this was done by ACD (Advanced Communications and Data) the broadband Internet company while doing utility work for businesses in the area. And that’s it for my banked stamps, so I’ll have to start finding some more. I actually spotted one more possible new stamp on that walk, but someone was milling around it messing with their phone and I would have felt weird walking close to him to take a photo of the sidewalk, so I had to give up on that one.

E. Michigan Ave., Dykstra, 2009

Somehow I walked by at least three contractor names I had never seen before on my way back to my car from the Silver Bells 5K. I was parked in front of the Lansing Center and the race was downtown, so that wasn’t a very long walk. I like the lettering style on this one. It’s on the north side of East Michigan Avenue between Washington and Grand, in front of the former Troppo (now apparently something called “The Gov”?).

So go on. Guess what part of the state Dykstra Cement Contractors hails from. Write your guess down. I’ll wait. If you at least guess the area code I’ll give you partial credit. The answer is after the picture.

Dykstra Cement is headquartered in Hudsonville, metro Grand Rapids. They’re still in business, but their Web site doesn’t give a company history, more’s the pity.

E. Michigan Ave., John C. Wallace, 1994

Today’s stamp is new to me (and this blog). I found it – and a few others, which will make their appearances in the next entries – while walking back to my car after participating in the Silver Bells 5K. It’s on East Michigan Avenue at the northwest corner of Michigan and North Washington Square, in front of the beautifully ornate former City National Bank building now occupied by a Comerica branch. The date is a little hard to read but I think it is 1994, which does fall within the timeframe during which I can ascertain that John C. Wallace Cement Contractor was in business.

The earliest reference I can find to the business is in the 1985 directory of the Michigan Association of County Drain Commissioners. An advertisement places them on Van Dyke in Utica (Google says the address is actually in Shelby Township). The latest I can find is in a 2011 bankruptcy petition by Bing Construction Company of Bloomfield Hills; they are named as a creditor.

Michigan Avenue Rehabilitation

Most Lansing residents have probably heard about the upcoming construction project on East Michigan Avenue, which the city is calling “Michigan Avenue Rehabilitation.” It has already caused the usual freakout because it will involve reducing traffic lanes from five to four in order to make room for protected bike lanes on either side of the street. I’m heartily in favor of it: as a frequent pedestrian I have been startled too often by bicycles barreling past my shoulder, but I also understand why they would choose to ride on the sidewalk when the alternative is riding in the traffic lanes on Michigan Avenue. A separate bike lane keeps both bicycles and pedestrians safer.

The project will stretch from Pennsylvania Avenue to Clippert Street. In addition to the traffic lane reduction, it will include “sidewalk replacement, traffic signal modernization, and upgrades to utilities such as sewer and water main work.” I believe this will mean entirely new sidewalk, so go see all the older contractor stamps while you still can. (Alas, we’ll never know what that -oleum stamp was.) According to the diagrams the city has provided, the new sidewalk will be seven feet across on both sides of the road, which I think is wider than most of the sidewalk in that area is at present. (Also, the above diagram is not to scale, since the new bike lane will actually be narrower than the sidewalk, not larger as it appears in the picture.) Details on the sidewalk configuration and the trees that will be planted between the bike lane and the road – sadly, I assume the current street trees will end up cut down – can be seen starting on page 30 of the full design plan.

More on this, as they say, as it comes to pass.

E. Michigan Ave., Bond Basile, undated

I might have walked past this one without taking notice a hundred times. It’s on the slab right in front of the IQ Fit building on the south side of East Michigan Avenue, between Francis and Mifflin. The concrete is in especially bad shape here, patched repeatedly with asphalt, so it is lucky that this stamp survives. It is undated, but could date to the construction of the adjacent building in 1959.

I have actually encountered this stamp just one other time, on the front walk of a house on South Pennsylvania, though only the word Basile was legible. Looking back at that one, the placement does suggest another word was probably worn away in front, so it probably also read Bond Basile. Unfortunately, I know nothing of the contractor, despite searching.

The stamp is on the nearest block that touches the vertical siding, facing the road.

E. Michigan Ave., […]oleum, 1927?

Wet pavement and streetlights combined to give me an especially good look at this half-lost stamp. It’s from the north side of East Michigan Avenue between Fairview and Magnolia, in front of the MetroPCS store. When I first photographed it back in 2020, I had to peel away a sod layer to see to the edge of the hacked-off slab, but thanks to my efforts at that time it is still all as visible as it can get. The reason for the update – besides that it’s an especially good look at it – is that I am now quite confident in the date being 1927. The curve of the penultimate numeral does not make sense for anything other than a 2.

E. Michigan Ave., Lansing DPS(?), 1947

Oh goody, one for my diagonal stamp collection. (I like corner markings, for some reason.) It’s quite faint and in fact I walk past here quite often and had not noticed it before. I think the wet pavement and the lighting brought it out this time. The date appears to be 1947 and the name is certainly either Lansing DPS or DPW. The DPS stamps and the 1920s-40s DPW stamps are similar in appearance.

What strikes me as interesting here is that it does look to me like it is DPS, and I had previously not found a DPS stamp from before 1950. I am not sure why or when the DPW changed to the DPS, but it changed to DPS sometime prior to 1950 (or, depending on this stamp, 1947), and then back again sometime between 1953 and 1977, and then started stamping O & M (Operations and Maintenance, part of the Division of Public Service) sometime between 1992 and 2005.

This stamp is outside Papa John’s Pizza on East Michigan Avenue, near the southwest corner of Michigan and Allen.

E. Michigan Ave., Flagpole hole (?)

What’s this metal disc in front of the Stadium District building, on the south side of East Michigan Avenue between Cedar and Larch? Could it be one of the holes drilled so businesses could display flags, as mentioned in a 1949 [Lansing] State Journal?

I find it doubtful, since this entire block was redeveloped in the 2000s, but since there are no dates on any of the sidewalks here, it’s impossible to say for sure how old they are. It does look like there is a hole here and that the metal plate is designed to be removable for some purpose (otherwise they would have just slapped some filler over the hole). There are a row of them up and down the block. They are too awkwardly placed to imagine them being used for flagpoles again, if that’s what they were originally for; this one, for instance, is in front of a window.

E. Michigan Ave., Granger Construction, 2005

I almost always stick to the south side of the road when walking past Sparrow on East Michigan Avenue, but continuing my recent effort to record stamps in front of Sparrow, I decided to cross. The stamp from last time was in front of the Professional Building, but this one is in front of Sparrow proper, or at least its parking deck.

Yesterday’s was dated 2004 and this one 2005, but no doubt they were both part of a big Sparrow expansion project that started in 2003.

The stamp is in the vicinity of this parking ramp sign.
Christmas decorations, seen from the other side of the building this time.