The proposed Downtown East real estate project in Minneapolis has been pushed along by the developer Ryan Cos., but it's clear that it has been a Wells Fargo deal since Day One.
Any remaining doubts were dispelled by plans showing just how much Wells Fargo wants its name all over the buildings. The bank's name is going to be in 5-foot-tall letters on each of the twin office towers, with retail branding and monument signs at street level.
That's pretty standard stuff, but what's clever is how Wells Fargo plans to grab some of the naming rights value from the new Minnesota Vikings stadium next door. That's because much of the roof on each building will be covered with a bright red and yellow Wells Fargo logo.
No customer would be able to see these logos while standing at an ATM. But a television viewer might, when a photographer on a passing blimp happens to be shooting for the broadcast of a National Football League game.
About the only place the name Wells Fargo does not yet appear is on an executed contract for its participation in the project. Along with the prominent role played by the Minneapolis-based Ryan, that has helped mask the fact that this project appears to be a pretty straightforward type of real estate deal called a "build to suit." That means a capable development firm like Ryan will do the building to suit the needs of a user like Wells Fargo.
The Wells Fargo buildings would be at the heart of an overall development project proposed by Ryan Cos. that will include park land on most of two city blocks, a parking garage and space for housing and retail. It's one of the most ambitious projects in the city's history, on five blocks of land that today get used mostly for surface parking and are owned by the parent of the Star Tribune.
This project appears to be very far down the road, but let's be clear: No Wells Fargo means no mixed-use development, no office towers and no parks in front of the new stadium. And if Wells Fargo walks away from the project, I will have to come to work longer in the newspaper's drafty old building.
The bank, officially and curiously, is acting like this is still an idea that it's sort of kicking around. A spokeswoman e-mailed that "while we are still in the stage of evaluating the opportunity to participate in the Ryan project, we are not discussing individual aspects of it."