Commercial real estate activity along the two-mile stretch of E. Lake Street from Hiawatha Avenue to the Mississippi River in Minneapolis is continuing to pick up with the recent coming of a new architecture studio.
292 Design Group, a three-partner firm composed of Tom Betti, Pam Anderson and Mark Wentzell, has joined a modest but growing number of businesses choosing to help bring new life to a commercial strip long known for empty storefronts.
The partners bought and rehabbed a one-story building at 3533 E. Lake St. last year and this winter are settling into their new digs, which feature exposed brick, open work spaces and a floor-to-ceiling front window.
It's quite a change from when the long-vacant storefront was home to Diane's Massage Parlor — one of a string of prostitution fronts in the neighborhood that eventually were forced out of business in the 1990s with the aid of determined city officials and Longfellow neighborhood activists.
As new, younger families moved into the neighborhood over the next decade, they brought a wave of residential investment, and commercial real estate investors eventually followed.
It has taken several years, and there still are plenty of vacancies along E. Lake Street, but now the area seems primed for a full-scale rebirth, Betti said.
"We had been headquartered in New Hope but were looking for a new space in the city," he said. "[Partner] Mark [Wentzell] came over here for a meeting one day and was driving down Lake Street when he saw the for-sale sign and thought, 'That could be a cool place."
He said the partners quickly realized that the area was up-and-coming, featuring a central location, transit access with the No. 21 Metro Transit bus and attractive streetscaping installed as part of Hennepin County's four-year effort to upgrade Lake Street, which was completed in 2008.