The old house on the hill on St. Paul's East Side joined the city's list of worst vacant properties back in 2012, but you wouldn't know it.
It has power and water. The property taxes and mortgage payments are current. And someone lives there.
Sure, the front door is boarded up. But the owner, Arjo Adams, comes in and out through the back.
The city of St. Paul wants to tear down the house, saying that dozens of code violations make it a threat to the safety of Adams and anyone else inside it. They had set a demolition date of Nov. 3, until Adams found a lawyer and got it postponed. Next month, the St. Paul City Council will decide whether to knock down the home where Adams has lived for more than two decades.
Nothing about the drama over 676 Wells St. is conventional. That has a lot to do with Adams, 61, an artist, tinkerer and urban scavenger with an explosive laugh and a distaste for being told what to do.
He grew up on a farm in North Dakota and moved to the Twin Cities after college. In 1989 and 1990, he ran a small theater company, Spirit of the Horse, in a warehouse in downtown St. Paul. About that time, Rebecca Rand, the legendary brothel madam, gave Adams the house on Wells, which she had acquired as a crash pad for some of her employees.
Adams had his sister put her name on the deed, because, he said, "I don't like to own things." Still, he made it his own.
The oldest part of the house dates to 1876, and it's perched above the Bruce Vento Trail just east of Payne Avenue. The roof sports a barn-style metal cupola and a weather vane with a pig riding on top. The skull of a cow hangs by a chain from the siding, and a gyroscope-like sculpture sprouts from the yard. The back yard descends steeply through terraces built from field stones, old foundation blocks and other stuff.