An affordable housing complex under construction at Cedar and E. Franklin avenues for 110 working-poor families also is a harbinger of an upticking Franklin Avenue, once best known for decrepit housing and shuttered storefronts.
The $41.7 million Mino-bimaadiziwin, which means "the good life," is being developed by the Red Lake Band of Chippewa on land it owns.
It's a short walk from the 2017 homeless encampment at Hiawatha and Cedar avenues that led American Indian leaders, city, county and private interests to replace the temporary "navigation center" on the 1.5-acre site with permanent housing, a mental health clinic and supportive services, as well as a local headquarters for the Red Lake band.
The band, which is investing $1.73 million in the six-story project and deferring a $931,787 development fee, is sending a signal that it will take the lead on combating substance abuse and other issues with housing and economic opportunity. Indians disproportionately are unemployed and homeless in Minneapolis.
The project also is the eastern edge of a mile-long span of Franklin Avenue that is emerging as the American Indian Cultural Corridor.
It already features Indian-themed housing, art galleries, eateries and plans for a $15 million overhaul and expansion that could begin as early as next year for the 45-year-old Minneapolis American Indian Center on Franklin at Bloomington Avenue.
"This is a community vision," said CEO Robert Lilligren of the Native American Community Development Institute (NACDI), based in a refurbished building at 14th Avenue and E. Franklin. "And we are keepers of the community vision.
"Our vision is a Native American cultural corridor that leverages the historic association [along E. Franklin] with the native community," said Lilligren, a member of the White Earth Band of Ojibwe. "We will create a destination between downtown and the airport that takes advantage of growing interest in native culture, an economic engine that is native-driven but inclusive of all communities."