The $495-a-month studio on the second floor of the Marimark Apartments has so little closet space that John Wright hangs his clothes on three racks by the bed.
Wright still loves his "hole in the wall" in downtown Minneapolis because it is cheap and close to his church, friends and the bus that takes him to his job as a hotel busboy in Bloomington.
Yet by November, Wright and about 60 others who live at 1226 Marquette Av. S will have to find a new home. This week, the Westminster Presbyterian Church next door closed on a nearly $5 million deal to buy the property, demolish the Marimark Apartments and use the space to expand its ministry and parking.
Church leaders have pledged to contribute $3 million toward the building of 150 new affordable housing units downtown. But that new housing will not be built soon enough to help those evicted.
The church's move has angered downtown's City Council member, Lisa Goodman, and others, who say Westminster's plan will shrink an already paltry supply of low-cost housing downtown. And it has left some residents pondering their next move after years, even decades, in the same one-room homes.
Goodman knocked on doors several months ago at Marimark, as the discussions with Westminster were underway, and conversations with residents were "enough to make you cry ... It's a really big deal, and that's why I'm so upset," she said.
The church's associate pastor, the Rev. Doug Mitchell, defended Westminster's plan as a way to expand important ministries while offering generous aid to displaced residents.
"We're very serious about affordable housing in the city and so we don't lightly tear down a building, even though it's in terrible condition," he said.