The normal world seemed to have stopped around April. Offices closed. Restaurants were shuttered. The downtowns emptied out.
But the construction projects that had already begun weren't stopped cold, waiting for someone to turn the key to the world again.
If a skyscraper's going up, the steel is en route. If there's an apartment building under construction, there are loans coming due.
Building during trying times isn't new. The Empire State Building was erected in the immediate aftermath of the stock market crash of 1929, and Rockefeller Center broke ground in 1931, in the teeth of the Great Depression.
So even though you may not be going to downtown Minneapolis often (or at all), construction has continued and the skyline has been changing. Here are some things you might notice when you next venture downtown:
Thrivent Financial (600 Portland Av. S.)
The headquarters was well underway before the pandemic hit. And while it's not officially open, it looks complete, right down to the circular interior lights that make it look like a warehouse for halos. The building is not the tallest nor the flashiest — eight stories of stone, glass and metal — but it is a cool, serene, crisp piece of architecture that will likely look self-contained and self-confident for decades.
The Public Service Building (505 4th Av. S.)
Under construction well before the shutdown, the 11-story structure is completely clad and the result is fresh and eye-catching. The facade is unique: a repeating series of rippling windows jutting out at the same angle.
It doesn't blend all that well with its surroundings, and that's OK. The color palette of the area was set by City Hall, the Hennepin County Government Center and the standoffish Hennepin County Public Safety Facility. It's a muted puce. (The parking ramp that the Public Services Building replaced was brighter, but bright puce is still puce.)