By Jennifer Brooks
Rochester and the Mayo Clinic are a step closer to a $6 billion makeover.
Friday was the first meeting of the eight-member board that will oversee Mayo's massive Destination Medical Center project. The multi-decade, multi-billion dollar project is intended to double Mayo in size and transform its hometown into a hip, attractive destination in its own right.
Twenty years from now, Rochester "is going to be better, it's going to be newer, it's going to be more attractive, it's going to be more dynamic and it's going to have more people with more jobs," said Gov. Mark Dayton, who traveled to the Mayo Civic Center to kick off the first meeting of the Destination Medical Center board – and to see his chief of staff Tina Smith picked as head of that board.
"Not to say there aren't going to be challenges along the way," Dayton said. "The challenges with expansion and further development and growth are far preferable to the ones on the other side. I think it's a fabulous opportunity for Rochester.
The board will oversee the largest economic development project in state history, which will blend Mayo seed money, more than $2 billion in private investment and more than half a billion dollars in state and local tax subsidies.
Over the next two decades, Mayo hopes to turn its already renowned facility into a global health destination on a par with the best health care centers in the nation. To woo patients and top doctors, it wants that facility to sit in a city with a vibrant and diverse economy and all the charm and appeal of a Portland, Ore., or a Madison, Wis., or an Austin, Texas.
Without the project, and without the $585 million in support from state and local taxpayers, Mayo officials had warned they might have to shift their focus away from the town that Mayo has called home for the past century and a half.