Cookie entrepreneur Tina Rexing knew she was going to have to shutter her T-Rex Cookie bakery and restaurant on University Avenue SE. in Minneapolis on Dec. 31.
She just didn't know that she was going to be in the middle of a legal fight between Prospect Park neighbors and the developer who plans to build a new residential-retail complex on the site. Rexing plans to return as an anchor retail tenant in 2020.
In the meantime, a bare-bones version of the business operates out of temporary digs in Eagan.
"T-Rex Cookie has been in business purgatory since the announcement of the development," said Rexing, who took the business from her kitchen five years ago to a retail-and-wholesale operation of $500,000-plus in sales last year. "This lawsuit only serves to delay the start of my next chapter."
Rexing, 46, a one-time IT manager for Northwest Airlines and Target, quit corporate America in 2014 to start T-Rex. She's CEO, chief baker and delivery-van driver.
The most recent obstacle is the Witch's Hat, a historic water tower in Minneapolis' Prospect Park neighborhood. The 110-foot tower offers a panoramic view of the Twin Cities. A Prospect Park neighborhood group alleges that the planned 14-story condo building along University Avenue will ruin the view from and of the water tower.
Visitors are permitted to climb up to the tower's observation deck only once a year, for an annual school fundraiser.
The lawsuit, filed by the Friends of Tower Hill Park against Chicago-based Vermilion Development and three property owners, argues that the redevelopment would violate the Minnesota environmental law by blocking the observation deck views of downtown St. Paul and the State Capitol.