St. Paul's long-downtrodden Payne Avenue is on an upswing this spring as real estate investments such as new restaurants and commercial property upgrades continue to pop up along the East Side thoroughfare.
Hoping to continue the redevelopment momentum that began in 2012 with the opening of Kendall's Ace Hardware at Payne and Phalen Boulevard, city and neighborhood leaders are working on two fronts — securing a key blighted parcel of land and providing more off-street parking.
In April, the St. Paul Housing and Redevelopment Authority executed a $50,000 purchase of 845-851 Payne Av. from the Twin Cities Community Land Bank, which had obtained the property from its private owners in December. Across the street from the Ward 6 restaurant and bar, the lot currently houses a vacant former electric motor shop, and before that was home to a gas station and an auto repair business.
The city plans to demolish the building and seek financing to clean up any soil contamination that's found, said Dan Bayers, a project manager with the St. Paul Department of Planning and Economic Development, who called the property "a critical site" in the redevelopment efforts along Payne Avenue and one of the final blighted commercial properties around the Payne-Phalen intersection.
"The neighborhood residents said, 'OK, we're doing some good work, but what about this last building?' " he said. "The Twin Cities Land Bank purchased it on our behalf to give us time to go through the proper channels to get approvals to acquire it."
The HRA purchase will close on May 27.
"The site was an eyesore, and it's hard to continue to keep businesses going there with this one last blighted parcel," Bayers added. "That's why it's a key to keep the momentum going on Payne Avenue. We've submitted an application to the Metropolitan Council and the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development for a grant to help determine what kind of contamination, if any, is there."
It's across the street from another HRA-owned parcel that is used for overflow parking for Ward 6 and is being marketed to potential developers. That land has drawn several expressions of interest. In recent months it was eyed as a possible site for the new Sober Fish Thai restaurant whose owners ultimately opted for a spot in Minneapolis' Seward neighborhood and is now being considered by a garden center, according to Anne DeJoy of the East Side Neighborhood Development Co.