Minneapolis is looking for more Charlie Brownings.
The contractor bought a dilapidated city-owned former orphanage on the North Side and recently converted it into a side-by-side duplex fit for a home improvement magazine. The house had been sitting empty since 2007, but a couple from south Minneapolis will be moving in this April.
"A lot of people look at me and think I'm [an idiot] for some of the projects I do," Browning said of his razor-thin profit margin on the project. "But I love doing this."
Minneapolis officials are intensifying efforts to persuade people to buy abandoned homes, hoping to boost homeownership and reinvestment in some of the city's most distressed neighborhoods. The effort follows years of a massive government effort to buy, build, rehab or demolish housing on the North Side, much of it paid for by more than $33 million from the federal government's Neighborhood Stabilization Program.
That program is now drying up, and with the foreclosure crisis receding, the city took the unusual step this winter of inviting the public to sessions on how to buy and rehab city-owned vacant houses. Though largely the domain of nonprofit developers in recent years, Minneapolis officials say they will give preference to buyers who intend to live in the homes.
The effort has given rise to criticism that the City Hall bureaucracy and extra financial hurdles still make the process too difficult for all but the most dedicated rehabbers.
"There's a lot of stuff that needs to happen for folks to move up to the North Side and actually help us to rebuild," Council Member Blong Yang told a packed meeting in Powderhorn Park last week. "I'm putting a lot of pressure on [city staff] to make this process a lot easier."
City assessor records indicate that home values in even the hardest-hit areas are starting to creep upward, potentially making the area more attractive to home buyers looking to take a chance on an abandoned house.