A Minneapolis developer is planning an ambitious $100 million mixed-use project including a skyway connecting several of downtown's most dynamic neighborhoods.
Sherman Associates is finalizing long-awaited plans to build 175 apartments, 30,000 square feet of retail and two levels of underground parking on a block that fronts Washington Avenue between Chicago and Park Avenues.
A skyway with an entrance near the corner of Washington and Chicago avenues would provide access to miles of downtown skyways, including those that will link the new Vikings stadium to the rest of the city's climate-controlled network.
"We've always planned on redeveloping that site, but given what's happened [with nearby development] it allowed us to put together a well-crafted plan for the site and move it along faster than we anticipated," said Tony Kuechle, Sherman's senior vice president of development.
That block is anchored by the Thresher Square building, a historic brick-and-timber structure facing S. 3rd Street that was converted into offices several years ago, but has been mostly vacant since the economic downturn and is now slated to become a hotel.
"I think it's absolutely very intriguing," said Jim Montez, senior director of Cushman & Wakefield/NorthMarq. "That's a building that has wanted for so long to be something more than it has been able to be."
The block is in the shadow of the new Wells Fargo towers, a new $1 billion Vikings stadium, hundreds of new apartments and a high-rise hotel with nearly 1,000 parking spaces.
A hotbed of construction
During a recent visit to the block, George Sherman said that, with an estimated $3 billion in construction happening in the area, Minneapolis is among the nation's most active cities.