Preservation panel rejects Dinkytown demolition

City Council is likely to step in after buildings slated to make way for hotel were found to contribute to historically significant district.

January 22, 2014 at 8:39AM
The Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission voted to block the demolition of the home of Camdi Vietnamese Restaurant in Dinkytown.
The Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission voted to block the demolition of the home of Camdi Vietnamese Restaurant in Dinkytown. (Susan Hogan — Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Amid calls for Dinkytown to be designated a historic district, the Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission voted Tuesday to block demolition of two commercial buildings that were needed to make way for a proposed hotel.

The final decision will almost inevitably fall to the City Council, which hears appeals of commission votes. At issue is a six-story boutique hotel that developer Kelly Doran has proposed building on 4th Street between 13th and 14th Avenues SE.

The commission voted to deny demolition permits for 1319 SE. 4th St. and 1315 SE. 4th St., despite staff recommendations for approval. Those properties currently house Camdi Vietnamese Restaurant, Mesa Pizza, Dinkytown Tattoo, Publika coffee shop and the University Lifecare Center.

Several commission members said while the buildings themselves are fairly mundane, they may contribute to a historically significant district. Dinkytown has not been designated as a historic district, but neighbors are pushing for such protections.

"I'm concerned about us looking at the buildings one at a time," commission member Sue Hunter Weir said. "I know we do that, but we've run into this problem before. … You start chipping away at buildings, then you destroy the context, and then that becomes the reason for more demolitions. You say, 'There is no context, because everything they contributed is gone.' "

Supporters of demolition said that people, rather than buildings, make Dinkytown historic.

"What makes it historical is the things that have transpired in the area, but not the buildings," said Mike Mulrooney, owner of the nearby Blarney Pub.

As with many areas of the city, parking was also a concern of project opponents. The hotel proposal includes one level of underground parking.

"We are concerned that the proposed development exacerbates a parking problem for the neighbors of the development, namely our congregation and those who work and worship with us," said Pastor Douglas Donley of University Baptist Church.

Eric Roper • 612-673-1732

about the writer

about the writer

Eric Roper

Curious Minnesota Editor

Eric Roper oversees Curious Minnesota, the Minnesota Star Tribune's community reporting project fueled by great reader questions. He also hosts the Curious Minnesota podcast.

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