An array of civic leaders on Tuesday proposed a $150 million renovation they said would keep Target Center in downtown Minneapolis competitive for 20 years.
But they said they still have to work out who would pay for it.
The plans would open up the city-owned building more to the street and nearby facilities such as Target Field. It would expand concourses and renovate locker rooms. New fan services such as another restaurant, a new bar, a food court, new club seats and a VIP entrance would be added.
Backers say they'll make a pitch for state assistance, arguing that the state benefits from arena taxes. But the city, the Timberwolves and facility manager AEG also are potential contributors, according to John Stiles, spokesman for Mayor R.T. Rybak.
One source that Rybak ruled out is an additional contribution from city property taxes. The city already collects about $5 million annually in property taxes to pay off the arena's debt.
The arena itself generates another $1.1 million in property taxes. Those are combined with a city-collected entertainment tax and parking collections to finance about $5 million annually in basic arena renovations.
Rybak said the $150 million plan would be atop that current $50 million, 10-year renovation of building systems.
There was no start date given for the proposal. Boosters said that Target Center is the fourth-oldest arena in the NBA, and teams that came into the league in the same era as the Timberwolves have much newer arenas.