This week, as rain-soaked, hard-hatted crews pumped concrete to the top floor of a 25-story riverfront apartment tower with arresting views of the downtown Minneapolis skyline, developer Kelly Doran is looking ahead. Next up: Two adjacent blocks where an excavator is demolishing a four-story office building where he and his partners will build another 574 rentals.
Over the next couple years, this three-block redevelopment project behind St. Anthony Main will have nearly 1,000 upscale rentals in a tower and several low-rise buildings, making it the tallest, biggest and most expensive project to date for Doran.
"This is a new adventure for us," he said during a recent tour of the tower, which is perched above St. Anthony Falls.
For Doran, who is codeveloping the site with Minneapolis-based CSM Corp., the $350 million project also represents what he said will be his last residential project in the city if a planned inclusionary zoning ordinance that requires developers to include income-restricted units in all new buildings moves forward.
Doran and CSM acquired the 8.7-acre site at 330 University Av. nearly three years ago from General Mills, which for decades operated its Riverside Technical Center on the site. The project will be developed one block at a time; the new apartment tower and buildings that surround it are being called the Expo in honor of the sprawling Industrial Exposition Hall building that stood nearby until the 1940s.
When residents start moving in early next year, construction will be well underway on the adjacent two blocks, filling one of the largest gaps in the Marcy-Holmes neighborhood.
"We're happy about the way it looks, but we're also happy there's not another tower," said Chris Lautenschlager, executive director of the Marcy-Holmes Neighborhood Association.
Doran and CSM originally proposed building a second 30-story tower and some income-restricted houses on one of the other two blocks, which are within the St. Anthony Falls Historic District. When that plan faced pressure from the Heritage Preservation Commission and some neighbors, they redesigned it as a set of low-rise buildings that will have nearly 600 units and some ground-floor retail space.