[msb-alumni] Re: Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for the Blind

  • From: "Peggy" <pyates2011@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 7 Apr 2014 13:52:34 -0400

BlankHey Peg, you are right. I watched that show too. I always liked Little 
House On the Prairie. That was a good show. I felt sad when they blew up the 
land in order to keep the surveyers and the railroad from laying claim to it. I 
think in those days, I would have done the same thing lol smile. Way to go 
Charles Ingels.
But yes, they may have taken over the property that the school sat on and they 
may tear down the buildings but they can never tear down the memories that we 
all have of our school. In our memories and our hearts, we are still Msb 
Raiders and our school is still going strong. May our colors red and white 
forever fly.
Peg Yats and Ld Ginger 70
pyates2011@xxxxxxxxx

From: peggy bowen 
Sent: Monday, April 07, 2014 12:43 PM
To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for the 
Blind

Hi all.  This reminds me of Little House on the Prairie when the last show was 
when the land was destroyed.  How sad and depressing.  We do have our memories. 
They were good one's and they will stay in our hearts forever.  They can't take 
them away from us.  Peg B. Class of 73.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Steve 
  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Sunday, April 06, 2014 2:00 PM
  Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for 
the Blind

  The way things stand right now ... 

  They are going to tear down the cottages and the Service Building.  So, the 
whole western half of the campus will be available for new housing development. 
 I don't think this plan has changed since the last meeting I was at a couple 
years ago discussing this.

  The Main Building will be used by the Lansing Housing Commission for their 
functions on the main floor.  The upper floors were planned to be sone kind of 
senior or low-income housing.

  The Old School Building was supposed to be a candidate for redevelopment, it 
has about 4,000 square feet of potentially commercial office space.  

  The Library, a 17,000 Square Foot building,  has been remodeled and is shared 
by Neighborhood Empowerment Center and the Greater Lansing Housing Commission.  
There are a couple meeting rooms available for community organizations.

  The Health Center, New School Building are used by the Mid-Michigan 
Leadership Academy, a charter school owned by Sabis Schools of New Orleans and 
sponsored by Central Michigan University; they also have the gymnasium as well 
as the land south of Maple Street.




  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Peggy 
  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Saturday, April 05, 2014 10:28 PM
  Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for 
the Blind

  Hi Bob,
  I find all of this so interesting. The more stories you guys all tell about 
the school and your experiences there I am more intrigued by it all. I started 
there in the fall of 1966-67 and as I said before, I graduated in June of 1970.
  So did they tear down the gym too? I remember many bowling sessions and 
sitting in the pits, resetting pins and sending the balls back and nearly 
getting hit by a ball or two a time or two. I also remember working out in the 
matt room the summer we were at cheerleading camp. Well we girls did work out, 
but we also sat on the matts and just talked about boys and all that other girl 
stuff. We sure all had some great times there didn’t we? And it was always 
great to go to the stand after school for social hour, and taste that cold pop 
and munch away on those chips or candy bars ect. an chat with friends. I 
remember I ran that stand for a while and kind’ve enjoyed it. I think we did 
that in our junior year and I remember in my senior year, I got a job as 
switchboard operator and Sandy Penman (Shimmun) and Larry Yanchus also worked 
the board on the weekends that I didn’t. Larry was the alternate who filled in 
when Sandy or I couldn’t work a particular weekend. 
  When the switchboard was turned on in the health center during the weekend 
shift, I would work Saturday nights and Sunday mornings and I remember how Miss 
Pez would be so kind as to bring me a big slice of her pound cake. She was a 
pretty cool nurse. I liked Mrs. Anderson too.

  From: Robert Spear 
  Sent: Saturday, April 05, 2014 9:38 PM
  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for 
the Blind

   
  I started in the 1962 1963 school year I think anyway. The first year they 
opened Andy cottage other than Blair those were the only 2 cottages. The others 
wasn’t even built until after that. The gym was open that year also I believe. 
I find it interesting that the oldest building on the campus is the one they 
are saving. The main building. All I can say it is a shame & very sad. 

   

  From: msb-alumni-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:msb-alumni-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Fred Wurtzel
  Sent: Saturday, April 05, 2014 4:52 PM
  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for 
the Blind

   

  Hi,

   

  I agree with all those who talk about our extended family.  I’m still very 
sad to know what is happening.  Some blind kids get good educations in their 
home districts, while others are truly suffering for lack of good role models, 
lack of Braille books and ignorance of blindness.  

   

  I also think it is interesting that the cottages weren’t there when I got 
there and are already gone.  Our Boy Scout troop camped out there where Long 
House used to be.    I wonder about our values as a society to think of such 
waste.

   

  Warmest Regards,

   

  Fred

   

  From: msb-alumni-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:msb-alumni-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jim in Detroit
  Sent: Saturday, April 05, 2014 7:18 PM
  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for 
the Blind

   

  I didn’t even finish reading that article; it was pitiful.

   

  From: Chris Rasmussen 

  Sent: April 04, 2014 08:49

  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 

  Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for 
the Blind

   

  Now I know I don’t want to even go by the campus. This is so sad for all of 
us who have many many memories of our time at M S B. I have an old yearbook 
that has many pictures be they black and white of the campus around 1969 or 70. 
Thanks for sharing this Steve. 

   

  Chris Rasmussen

   

  From: Steve 

  Sent: Thursday, April 03, 2014 10:02 PM

  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 

  Subject: [msb-alumni] Demolition Underway at Former Michigan School for the 
Blind

   

  Well, if there isn't enough downer news on this list lately.  Here's more...

   

  Demolition underway on campus of Lansing's former Michigan School for the 
Blind . LANSING - Demolition has begun on what was once a dining hall at the 
Michigan School for the Blind. A maintenance building will come next and then 
the "cottages," squat brick buildings that once served as dormitories. The 
27,000-square-foot auditorium built in the 1950s is also on the list, though 
its destruction might still be averted. Tom Edmiston, senior vice president for 
Great Lakes Capital Fund, a nonprofit that owns the more elegant structures on 
the site, described the work as "demolition and clearance, kind of making the 
campus available for redevelopment. Redevelopment has been slow in coming. The 
Lansing campus of the School for the Blind closed in the fall of 1995 and the 
few remaining students were moved to Flint. Much of the campus has been idle 
since. The Ingham County Land Bank, which owns much of the campus, renovated 
the historic 6,000-square-foot superintendent's house in 2009. It's now 
oc'cup'ied by Rizzi Designs. The former library became the Greater Lansing 
Housing Coalition's Neighborhood Empowerment Center in 2010. But the 
century-old administration building and former high school building have lain 
fallow. Edmiston said Great Lakes Capital does have a purchase agreement on the 
administration building, rechristened The Abigail, from a developer who wants 
to use it for affordable housing. The project is contingent on assistance from 
the state. The state is funding the demolition work though a $1.8 million 
blight removal grant. The grant was approved last year, but "it's taken this 
long to get all the necessary pieces of paper together that the state needed 
before they would release funds," Edmiston said. There is still time, not much 
though, to save the auditorium. "If we got any serious offers for the 
auditorium as is, then we wouldn't proceed with the demolition," Edmiston said. 
But the window is probably no longer than six weeks. "Given fact that we 
haven't heard anything for several years now about interest in the auditorium, 
it's hard to imagine that someone would step forward at this point," Edmiston 
said.

   

  Tum podem extulit horridulum

   

  Steve
  Lansing, Pure MI

   

  P.S.  Look up the Latin translation of that signature on Google, it really 
sums up things right now, lol.

   

   



  Jim in Detroit
  James A. Prather
  Central Michigan University: 1980
  Michigan School for the Blind: 1974
  "Fire Up Chips"
  "Ungh, ungowa, Raiders still Got the Power!"

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