Students have chowed down, picked up groceries, sat for haircuts and run other errands for more than a century at the corner of Washington Avenue SE. and Harvard Street. But the wrecking ball is coming for this slice of campus past, with a 26-story apartment building on the way.
The nondescript row of storefronts is one of the few historical commercial structures still standing in the rapidly evolving Stadium Village area, named after the Memorial Stadium that once dominated the edge of campus. Popular campus hangouts there, such as Big 10, Village Wok, Espresso Exposé and Bun Mi, have recently announced closing dates.
The building's 111-year history touched myriad U students. But it also played a role in the life of legendary Minnesota politician Hubert Humphrey, who worked as a pharmacist on the corner to support himself through college in the late 1930s. Passersby 80 years ago might have even seen Humphrey with his pal Orville Freeman — future governor and U.S. agriculture secretary — honing their debate skills at Brown's Drug late into the night.
The Humphrey wrinkle — not highlighted in the city's historical review — isn't likely to protect the 1905 building, which will be demolished for a 438-unit luxury apartment building geared toward professors and downtown professionals. It's one of many new residential buildings to rise in the area, bisected by the Green Line light rail, that have brought renewed vitality to the street. But some worry it comes at the expense of small businesses.
"You're going to end up with a bunch of national chains with 20-year guaranteed leases, because developers aren't interested in independently owned businesses," said Todd DuPont, co-owner of Big 10, which closes Sept. 3 after 60 years in business. "They want guaranteed money because developers sell their buildings, they don't hang on to them."
Politics at the counter
One of those independent mainstays, Harvard Market, operated in the building for most of the 20th century before closing several years ago. Another was Brown's, which opened in the early 1900s and was replaced by Harvard Drugs by the 1960s.
Humphrey landed a job there in 1937 soon after his father, a pharmacist who ran a drugstore in Huron, S.D., drove him and his wife, Muriel, to campus. Humphrey, a registered pharmacist, had been helping run the family business before returning to school.
"Plunged once again into the world of ideas, I squeezed every minute for what it was worth," Humphrey, who became the city's youngest mayor in 1945, wrote in his autobiography. "And each moment was saturated with the essence of my future life: politics, debate on issues, change in society. It was a joyous time."