Two distinctly different visions — a hotel and an apartment tower — emerged this month for a key piece of property in downtown Minneapolis, right in the shadow of the new $1 billion Vikings stadium.
The city of Minneapolis received the pitches from two well-established Minnesota-based developers, Ryan Companies and Mortenson Development, for the space above a 1,610-space parking ramp that is part of a $400 million mixed-use development planned for eastern downtown.
The proposals represent a white-hot apartment market already in full throttle in downtown Minneapolis, as baby boomers and millennials flock to the urban core, as well as improving demand for hotel rooms post-Great Recession.
"It's hard to go wrong with either," said Steve Cramer, president and CEO of the Minneapolis Downtown Council, a business group that is neutral on the proposals. "Both uses will predominate as Downtown East fills out, and set the pace for future development."
Ryan is developing the "Downtown East" project, which includes two office towers housing 5,000 employees for Wells Fargo & Co., 200 apartments, retail shops and restaurants, and a nearly two-block public park. The development will encompass five city blocks near the current Metrodome in an area of the city that has long resisted meaningful development.
Ryan's $104 million idea for the space atop the parking ramp involves a 28-story apartment tower spanning about 344,000 square feet, with an additional 6,000 square feet of restaurant and retail space along S. 4th Street. Construction would begin in May 2015, with completion slated for August 2017.
The competing proposal came from Mortenson Development, whose sister company is building the nearby Vikings stadium. It has pitched a $63 million plan that includes a 300-room hotel dual-branded as AC by Marriott and SpringHill Suites by Marriott. Construction on this project would begin in January 2016, with completion expected by January 2017.
The city will pick a proposal by early March. Newly elected Mayor Betsy Hodges declined through a spokeswoman to say which option she favors, preferring to learn more about the ideas before deciding.