Carl Eide thought he'd spend his remaining years in the house he's lived in for the past four decades. Instead, at 82, he finds his home, his life and his finances in chaos.
Eide has been evicted from his 1890 home, one of the oldest buildings in St. Louis Park. The crumbling house on busy Minnetonka Boulevard perches awkwardly above a 5-foot-deep trench around its perimeter, the legacy of a failed renovation that caused more problems than it solved.
And after a two-year court battle, Eide's home is scheduled to be demolished at the end of January — on his 83rd birthday.
"The whole thing is just a rotten set of circumstances," Eide said.
With his muscular frame, leather jacket and gray ponytail, Eide looks every inch the biker he's been his whole life. He sold and repaired motorcycles for decades and has been active in racing and classic bike associations. The living room in his house is neatly lined with bookshelves holding a trove of motorcycle and auto shop manuals and racing publications.
But his main problems are outside the house. It all began a couple of years ago, when the front porch started to sag away from the building.
"That started everything, more or less," Eide said.
Never quite enough
The story of Eide's house, documented in two years' worth of court filings, tells of an earnest effort on both sides to deal with an ancient home that was admittedly falling into disrepair.