As fire consumed dozens of businesses along E. Lake Street in the unrest following the death of George Floyd, the Minnehaha and Lake Street post offices were reduced to gaping, charred hulks.
Now the United States Postal Service (USPS) is "exploring many options" to re-establish itself in the south Minneapolis neighborhoods affected by the recent fires and looting.
"We are already moving forward to provide customers a local facility to call their own," said Nicole Hill, a USPS spokeswoman, in an e-mail. "It is too early in the process to provide a timeline."
But the simple scrawl on the remains of the Minnehaha post office seemed to reflect the neighbors' views: "Rebuild!!!"
"Tears came to my eyes when I watched [the Lake Street] post office go down in flames," said Tiwanna Jackson, president of Tweak The Glam Studio, a small beauty business at Lake and Lyndale Avenue. "The whole community is crushed."
Jackson said she stopped by the Lake Street station every week to retrieve mail for her business, which was damaged by looting. "They need to bring it back," she said.
The 43-year-old Lake Street facility, which is owned by the USPS, spanned 80,000 square feet on nearly two acres of land at 110 E. 31st St. near Lake and Nicollet Avenue, according to Hennepin County property records. Because it is a federal property, no market value is listed.
The Minnehaha post office at 3033 S. 27th Av., built off Minnehaha Avenue on nearly an acre in 1970, is owned by a Bloomington-based limited liability corporation and leased by the postal service. Its market value is just over $1 million, county records state.