After years of being largely overlooked, the corner of Snelling and Selby in St. Paul is getting a long-overdue overhaul.
Once the kind of unpretentious place where Charlie Brown might feel at home, the corner is on the verge of a makeover so ambitious that the late Charles Schulz, the "Peanuts" cartoonist who grew up there, might not recognize it.
A two-stage housing and commercial development by Ryan Cos., along with Metro Transit's $25 million plan for Snelling Avenue, promise to revitalize the largely underdeveloped corner with new market-rate apartments, an upscale grocery and the metro area's first arterial rapid bus line.
The latter, to be called the "A Line," will link Rosedale with light-rail stations at University Avenue and 46th Street in Minneapolis.
But the activity also has heightened concerns about congestion from Ayd Mill Road, the short bypass that routes traffic onto Selby Avenue from northbound Interstate 35E and several city neighborhoods.
It's not unusual to find cars backed up on Selby for more than a block en route to Snelling Avenue and I-94.
"Most people are positive about the development itself, but worried that it will add traffic to an area that's already burdened," City Council Member Russ Stark said.
Another issue is off-street parking. Some worry that there won't be enough to accommodate nearby businesses, while others say that a large parking lot planned for the Whole Foods grocery will only encourage more auto traffic.