Kelly Doran is a headstrong guy. The son of working-class single mom, Doran, 55, worked nights and weekends in a liquor store to earn undergraduate and graduate business degrees at the University of Minnesota.
He has built over the last decade, without subsidy, about $215 million worth of high-quality Minneapolis housing and commercial projects that replaced a lot of substandard housing and surface parking lots. Those projects will produce about $4 million in property taxes next year.
On Friday, Doran's planned Dinkytown residential-retail project narrowly avoided a development moratorium that was rejected last week by a divided Minneapolis City Council. So instead of being sidelined for up to six months, any critics of Doran's project can come forward through the regular planning-and-zoning process.
"This did feel a little personal," Doran said of the moratorium bid after the vote.
For example, a larger development by Opus on the same block already has been approved. But some neighbors have started a "Save Dinkytown" movement.
Council Member Gary Schiff, who chairs the Zoning and Planning Committee, said to hold up Doran's project via moratorium hearings just as the veteran Minneapolis developer was about to present his application and proceed with the planning-and-approval process would put politics ahead of policy and process.
"We know this is targeted to stop Kelly Doran," Schiff said. "There are no other plans coming forward."
Doran has experience building in Dinkytown. Four years ago, in the depths of the Great Recession, Doran put down a whopping $10.8 million to jump-start his long-delayed $36 million renovation of the iconic "Minnesota Dinkydome" office-retail complex in Dinkytown and an adjacent 125-unit apartment building. Today that project is a solid success.