Minneapolis has surpassed the $1 billion mark in the value of construction projects for the second year in a row. This year and last year were the first billion-dollar construction years since 2000.
The milestone was reached at the end of October, a month earlier than in 2012. There have been 10,371 building permits issued to date for new buildings, additions, remodels and miscellaneous work.
That includes 130 permits covering 2,880 housing units, according to Minneapolis Community Planning & Economic Development. The city is expected to have under permit by year's end up to 3,900 new dwelling units, about the same number of units as in 2012.
The priciest 2013 construction projects in Minneapolis by building permit valuation are: A Mill Apartment Building at 315 SE. Main St., valued at $68.1 million; The Nic, a 26-story apartment building located at 465 Nicollet Mall, $68.1 million; UTEC Apartment Building at 1313 SE. 5th St., $59.9 million; Stonebridge Condominium at 1102 S. 2nd St., $48.3 million; apartments at 2828 Dupont Av. S., $36.1 million.
MHTA participation, aspirations on rise
Margaret Anderson Kelliher, president of the Minnesota High Tech Association, said membership is back to prerecession levels of more than 300.
More than 900 people attended the annual Tekne Awards ceremony Wednesday night at which 15 small and large organizations were recognized for innovations in manufacturing, agriculture, health care, education and other categories. MHTA also has stepped up support of undergraduate scholarships for students who excel in science and math, internships and outreach.
A new award for "STEM" education and digital learning went to the University of St. Thomas School of Engineering for its no-cost camps over the past 14 years that have hosted 3,000 schoolgirls in workshops covering electronics, physics, renewable energy, computer programming, as well as weaving in art and creative applications with technology. A lot of these were disadvantaged kids who have gone on to college degrees in technical fields.
Gray Plant scores in trade-secret case
The Minneapolis law firm Gray Plant Mooty scored a huge win last month on behalf of dairy system and equipment manufacturer RELCO against two former employees and their Wisconsin-based employer over the theft of trade secrets. Following a nine-day trial in Kandiyohi County District Court, a jury awarded Willmar-based RELCO $22.7 million in damages for the misappropriation of proprietary company material relating to dairy processing systems and cheesemaking equipment.