Months after the Minnesota Vikings canceled a $45 million deal to buy Star Tribune property near the Metrodome, the two sides resumed negotiations and the Vikings continued to buy property in the area that would surround their proposed new stadium.
As Tuesday's deadline for bids on the Star Tribune's five blocks near the Metrodome passed, Avista Capital Partners, the newspaper's parent company, remained mum about potential buyers. But Avista Vice President Greg Evans acknowledged in an interview April 17 that the company has had several discussions with the Vikings' owners concerning the 12.4 acres of land -- a point verified Tuesday by Vikings Vice President Lester Bagley.
Evans declined to comment Tuesday, but other area property owners believe Vikings owner Zygi Wilf still envisions building a stadium on the Metrodome site and developing the land around it.
Just days after the Minnesota Vikings killed the deal to buy four city blocks owned by the Star Tribune this past August, local property owner Mike McDonald said he received a call from Vikings representatives telling him the Wilfs still were interested in his property on 3rd Street near Chicago Avenue.
McDonald's family owns A.Y. McDonald Manufacturing and purchased land in downtown Minneapolis nearly a century ago. A.Y. McDonald sold a section of that property to the Wilfs Oct. 11, McDonald said Tuesday.
Basant Kharbanda, another downtown property owner who said he was contacted by Zygi Wilf, said the Wilfs have asked some landowners if they would abide by development plans the Wilfs have choreographed -- even if the Wilfs don't buy their property.
"But they've always concentrated on the Star Tribune land first," Kharbanda said months after the original Vikings-Avista deal dissolved.
Changes in circumstances