Hennepin County on Tuesday sold the defunct grain elevator on Hiawatha Avenue at 41st Street for its minimum price: $23,000.
The buyer is a Minnesota native and Twin Cities property owner named Adam Mackie, a Navy officer based in Germany. He wants to turn the old structure into apartments.
Mackie, originally from Ely, Minn., was the sole bidder for the elevator in an auction at the Hennepin County Government Center. When bidding opened at 9:04 a.m., Chris Mauzy, a Twin Cities property manager who represents Mackie, raised his bid card once. A minute later, the gavel dropped.
Mauzy manages four apartment buildings on behalf of Mackie throughout the Twin Cities. This will be their most ambitious project by far.
"He wants to explore grain silo apartments like some he has seen in Europe," Mauzy said. "Obviously, Plan B if the city won't allow it, will be to tear it down and build new apartments in its place."
Doing so will likely cost millions of dollars. A report by the county showed there's water in the basement, crumbling materials, uneven surfaces and ventilation problems to overcome.
"I don't think he's worried because of his preplanning," Mauzy said. "He spent a couple of months researching this one."
Hennepin County, shackled with the tax-forfeited property, simply wanted to get the parcel back on its tax roll.