The Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe, which has enjoyed major success with its Grand Casinos up north, is getting into the major hotel business. And it's starting in downtown St. Paul.
The band is buying two hotels there, Chief Executive Melanie Benjamin announced Tuesday in her State of the Band address in Onamia, Minn. She described it as "one of the boldest business moves we have ever made."
Because the deal won't be final for another month, tribal leaders declined to identify the hotels. But sources said they were the Crowne Plaza Riverfront, St. Paul's largest hotel, on Kellogg Boulevard, and the DoubleTree by Hilton at 6th and Minnesota Streets, the city's third-largest.
The Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal reported in August that they had been put up for sale by SP Hotels, an affiliate of New York-based Trinity Hotel Investors. City officials said they were not aware of any other major downtown hotels on the market. Trinity bought the hotels, both of them Radissons, from the St. Paul Port Authority in 2006 for $43.4 million.
City leaders, who labored last week to put a happy face on the closing of the downtown Macy's store, said the hotel purchases signaled growing interest in downtown. A couple of industry experts said they thought the city's new light-rail line, which begins running next year, might have been a factor.
"This is a good investment for the city and a sign that the downtown of 2013 is a different place from the downtown of decades past," said Joe Campbell, a spokesman for Mayor Chris Coleman.
The purchase represents a new effort to diversify the tribal economy in areas beyond gambling to achieve "economic self-sufficiency," Benjamin told more than 1,200 band members gathered for the annual speech.
The hotels will be managed by Graves Hospitality Corp., the Minneapolis-based hotel company that operates the Graves 601 Hotel in downtown Minneapolis and is owned by entrepreneur and former congressional candidate Jim Graves.