The downtown St. Cloud block housing City Hall is poised to become a Bremer Bank and drive-through retail space.
St. Cloud's Planning Commission on Tuesday voted to recommend approval of a developer's plans to raze the current City Hall and build a two-story office building, as well as a parcel on the western side of the building for a cafe or restaurant.
"We do that think this is a good balance between the commercial intent and the historic preservation intent that we've always had on the Fifth Avenue corridor," said Matt Glaesman, community development director for St. Cloud, at the planning commission meeting.
Hwy. 23 — also known as Division Street — is a main east/west thoroughfare from Hwy. 10 to Hwy. 15 and Waite Park. Fifth Avenue connects St. Cloud's downtown to St. Cloud State University. Redevelopment in recent years has focused on creating a corridor where people can live, work, shop, dine and find entertainment.
"We were able to partner with someone to sell our current location and we've been working on this for a while," said Tom Rickers, Bremer's executive vice president of consumer banking and mortgage. "As this came open — obviously it's a downtown, prominent, historic site — we thought it would be a great location for our customers and employees."
If the development plans are approved by the St. Cloud City Council at an upcoming meeting, Bremer Bank will move its downtown St. Cloud branch to the new site, which is being dubbed Highbanks Plaza. Bank branches on the west side of St. Cloud and in nearby Rice are remaining open, although some services are being consolidated at the new site.
"We're just excited to stay in downtown in a historic site [and] build a facility that will really accommodate our customers, our employees and our community for a very long time," Rickers said. "We designed our plans around being forward-thinking around where banking is going."
The City Hall block, just two blocks west of the Mississippi River, is historic: It housed the city's first public high school, Union Public School, before Technical High School opened in 1917.