
Market Bar-B-Que quietly opened the doors to its new home in northeast Minneapolis on Wednesday afternoon. It was a sweet moment. As his father and business partner, Steve Polski, aimed and clicked his cellphone camera, Anthony Polski flipped the switch to illuminate a red and blue neon "Open" sign. It was 4 p.m., and a 73-year-old Minneapolis dining tradition sparked a new chapter.
Looking around, it all felt, well, old. In a good way. Better yet: familiar. As in comforting, and nostalgic.
That's because the Polskis have effectively re-created their Minneapolis dining landmark in a new address. They've salvaged an extraordinary amount of materials from their Nicollet Avenue restaurant, carted it four miles to the northeast and carefully reinstalled it (with the help of Blumentals/Architecture of Minneapolis) in what had been a vacant, condemned eyesore.
That neon sign will be familiar to Market fans. Ditto the eye-grabbing exterior sign that used to light up Eat Street. The windows and the front door also came from the old place.

Inside, the time-worn wood beadboard, light fixtures, ceiling fans and ceiling tiles are present and accounted for. The booths and ornate bar (originally retrieved, decades ago, from the former White House restaurant and nightclub in Golden Valley) have all been carefully and lovingly reclaimed. Even the distinctive red carpet will ring visual bells; the Polskis made use of the leftover rolls they were storing in the basement of their Nicollet Avenue location. "We had enough to carpet this entire place," said Anthony Polski with a laugh.

Once again, the dining room's walls are lined with autographed pictures of every sports, entertainment and political bigwig that ever graced the place.
"I love it," said Steve Polski. "It's new and shiny, but you know that the minute you walk in, it's the Market. And you smell it."

That's because the restaurant's heart made the move, too (the soul, without question, is the Polskis, and their 25 employees, many with decades of experience). It's the kitchen's brick-lined, wood-fired barbecue pit. It has been re-created in the same dimensions, finished with the same salvaged doors and framed in showy red tiles. A window (pictured, above) offers diners a glimpse into what makes the Market the Market.