One eye-popping detail stuck out in our story from last week about a plan to renovate historic Fort Snelling buildings into 176 affordable apartments for veterans, at a cost of $600,000 per unit.
That's the $28.4 million fee the proposed developer, a firm called Dominium of Plymouth, received for pulling together a similar development several years ago at the historic Pillsbury A-Mill in Minneapolis.
That kind of money for the deal promoter seems likely to be one reason this whole thing at the fort is proposed to cost so much. But it's never been my approach to complain loudly about the price of nice things after looking into them and concluding that's just what such things cost.
This proposed Fort Snelling project is expensive because it would do two things at once, creating some affordable places to live and restoring very old buildings to 2018 standards.
As for the work of Dominium, well, this isn't the kind of project novices should take on. It's a good idea to take a closer look at the project now called the A-Mill Artist Lofts, not to show how one firm made a lot of money (it probably hasn't, at least not yet) but as an illustration of how these things come together.
The Pillsbury A-Mill is probably the best-known reminder of the glory days of Minneapolis as a center for flour milling. It stands across the river from downtown Minneapolis, near the Falls of St. Anthony.
Among its recent owners was a real estate firm controlled by one of my brothers, and that's how I once received a private tour. It's so important to our economic history that it's had the rare status as a National Historic Landmark since the 1960s.
But to state the obvious, anyone interested in developing an efficient apartment building wouldn't go near it.