Trumpeting what aims to be the largest redevelopment in St. Paul history, Mayor Melvin Carter announced Tuesday that the city has reached a deal with Ryan Cos. to transform the former Ford assembly plant site into a bikeable, walkable village of thousands powered by renewable energy.
"This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity," Carter said. "I'm confident that the City Council, our business community and our residents are going to see this as an enormous vision for our city and be excited to move forward."
Carter said he expects that by the end of the year, the council will vote on the deal, which commits $53 million in property taxes generated by the site to help build out its streets and utilities.
At a news conference inside a heated tent on a frigid day at the now-vacant 122-acre site, city officials were joined by Gov. Tim Walz and a bevy of legislators and labor union officials.
The project is expected to generate 14,500 construction jobs over its two-decade build-out and employ more than 1,000 full-time employees when fully developed.
Walz said the site is shaping up to be one of Minnesota's most significant redevelopment opportunities.
The governor noted that getting to this point took 10 years of proposals and meetings, following Ford's announcement that it was closing the plant it built near the Mississippi River in 1925. He praised former Mayor Chris Coleman and city officials who spent much of the past decade bringing Tuesday's announcement to fruition.
"Soon, you will have a livable, workable community where the community was engaged in how this was done," Walz said.