Wednesday, October 31, 2007

The case of the missing steel

Macomb likes its new restaurants. A couple years ago, the city got its first-ever Arby's and -- according to (possibly apocryphal) lore -- set a record for greatest opening-day sales for an Arby's in North America. You don't mess with Macomb when it comes to curly fries.

So locals had a lot of similar enthusiasm when, earlier this year, Buffalo Wild Wings announced that it would build a new restaurant in the highly coveted land right in front of Wal-Mart. Construction crews showed up and began prepping the foundation. And then things just . . . stopped. For the past month or so, the site has looked like this:


The Macomb rumor mill went into overdrive, with some locals speculating that the Macomb City Council had denied the restaurant a liquor license. (Wal-Mart sued the city a few years ago when its liquor request was shot down.) But as Nathan Woodside of the Macomb Eagle reported on October 15, liquor wasn't the problem:
Kim Pierce, Macomb Area Economic Development Corporation executive director, said construction has stopped because a batch of steel needed to be back-ordered before excavation could continue.

"When I talked to them a couple weeks ago, they thought the steel was just a couple weeks away, so that basically brings up to right now," Pierce said. "Hopefully that will get delivered in over the weekend and they can start next week."
No word yet on the missing steel. The restaurant was originally scheduled to open sometime in November, but Pierce is quoted later in the article as saying that date has been pushed back until the end of the year. A hungry Macomb stands ready.

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