(06/27/17) - Homes, yards, businesses, schools and streets - there wasn't much our recent flooding didn't damage.

While the water has started to recede, there's a lot of cleanup work ahead.

Central Michigan University in Mt. Pleasant may have one of the longest to-do lists and largest repair bills to deal with. Early estimates put damages between $7 and $10 million.

"We have 127 total buildings on campus, and we've seen some sort of flood impact in about 50 of those buildings," said Jonathan Webb, associate vice president of Facilities Management at CMU.

The university is working with insurance adjustors to find all the nooks and crannies damaged. So far, most of the damage they've found is minor.

"It's been water down in unfinished basements. We're mainly assessing mechanical systems at this point," Webb said.

That's not the case at the Student Activity Center, where the hum of dryers can be heard 24/7.

"It only is a couple inches here in this building, but the wood soaks up the water pretty quickly, and once that occurs, the wood will start buckling, as you can see behind us," Webb said.

Around the corner from the basketball courts, flood waters made it into a weight room. The floor has been ripped out, carpet on the lower part of the walls has been removed, and they're trying to dry out.

The recently opened Theunissen Baseball Performance Development Center didn't fair as well late Thursday into early Friday.

"We had about ankle-high water about 4 a.m. A couple hours later, we were over two feet of water inside the facility," Webb said.

We spotted a water line on the door to prove it.

Inside, water rose above the lower part of the players' lockers and left mud inside. Plus, a brand new turf area was also soaked as water poured in the doors.

"The rains came very quick, and the floods built up very, very quickly, and they also went down quickly," Webb said.

Despite the damage, campus life has not been impacted. Summer classes started Monday, and events and camps are going on as scheduled.

Webb hopes to have the damage assessment completed this week, allowing the university to come up with a repair schedule.