About the Project

For decades, there has been a devastating disinvestment in the city of Pontiac by corporations and government, leaving the historic downtown strewn with vacant storefronts, crumbling infrastructure and blight. Oakland County, in partnership with the state of Michigan and city of Pontiac, has the rare opportunity to make a transformational investment in Pontiac’s downtown.

By demolishing the deteriorating Phoenix Center and refurbishing a long vacant General Motors building that will become home to up to 700 Oakland County employees, the Pontiac Redevelopment Project will open up the downtown and bring much-needed foot traffic, private investment in retail and housing and a renewed energy to the county seat’s downtown. It is expected to generate $80 million in cost savings from moving out of older, less efficient county buildings over the next decade.

Press conference held at the Phoenix Center on April 8, 2025.

Latest Updates

  • Sept. 15, 2025: Oakland County, city of Pontiac and state of Michigan officials were on hand when the last of the above-ground structures at the Phoenix Center—a flight of cement stairs at the west side of the site—came tumbling down. Once the underground support structures are removed later this year, construction will begin on two new parking garages for downtown Pontiac.
  • Aug. 21, 2025: As demolition of the Phoenix Center neared completion—ahead of schedule—Oakland County, Pontiac and community leaders unveiled the next phase of the Pontiac Redevelopment Project. Construction of two parking garages and the rehabilitation of 31 E. Judson, where up to 700 Oakland County employees will move will begin later this year.
  • June 11, 2025: The county selected Endeavour Pontiac Partners, LLC as the developer for two parking decks and downtown site improvements.
Press conference held at the Phoenix Center on August 21, 2025.

Traffic Cone

Logistical Information

Street closures and interim parking arrangements for tenants, workers and visitors to 51111 Woodward Ave. are needed to accomplish this project.

Road locked street closures

Street Closures

Auburn/Orchard Lake Road closed to through traffic March 31. Construction, delivery and refuse/recycling vehicles may access north loading dock.

parking symbol

Interim Parking

51111 Woodward Ave. tenants, employees and visitors park for free at the northern surface lot, across Auburn/Orchard Lake Road, using a parking code. Parking is 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Visitor and after-hours parking is available on Judson Street.

More About the Project

Oakland County is partnering with the city of Pontiac on a transformational revitalization project in the heart of downtown Pontiac. The Pontiac Redevelopment Project includes:

  • Demolishing the Phoenix Center and parking garage — reopening Saginaw Street through to what is now the south end of the Woodward Loop.
  • Renovating the vacant former GM building at 31 E. Judson St. into a new county satellite campus — returning 700 county employees to downtown Pontiac after an absence of more than 50 years.
  • Creating open spaces for commercial and residential growth opportunities and a much more walkable environment in downtown Pontiac.
  • Constructing one or more new parking structures for workers, residents and people doing business in downtown Pontiac.
Map of Downtown Pontiac Proposed Development

Contact Info

Community Engagement

248-424-7050

Media Contacts

Bill Mullan
Public Information Officer

248-858-1048


Kathy Gray
Senior Communications Advisor

248-452-8646

News

Pontiac revitalization project moves forward with demolition

Published by The Detroit News

Post Date:08/21/2025 4:02 PM

Pontiac is moving into the next phase of construction for hundreds of Oakland County employees to relocate to downtown — a move officials hope will revitalize the area.

Oakland County, city and state officials announced Thursday the demolition of the Phoenix Center at the intersection of South Saginaw and Water streets in downtown Pontiac in the next week. They said the demolition clears the way for developments, including two new parking garages, two acres of green space and the renovation of the former General Motors Corp. building at 31 E. Judson St., where 700 county employees are expected to relocate in 2027.

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