Burnsville Center, the south metro mall that has long struggled to fill empty storefronts, could soon change hands.
The ownership shift, plus a potential infusion of city grant money, could revamp the languishing shopping complex.
"The mall is in contract to be sold," co-owner Felix Reznick told the Star Tribune on Thursday. Reznick is a principal at 4th Dimension Properties, a partner of New York-based Kohan Retail Investment Group, which purchased the majority of Burnsville Center in late 2020.
Reznick wouldn't say who the new owner of Burnsville Center could be. He also wouldn't say when the sale could close, citing a nondisclosure agreement. There isn't yet a public record of the sale in the state's database of electronic certificates of real estate value.
The 2020 sale, not including the anchor stores, was for about $17 million at auction, a massive decline for a property once valued at $135 million. Last year, Pacific Square Burnsville, a development group, bought a chunk of the mall for $10.6 million, including Dick's Sporting Goods, Kirkland's Home, Panera Bread, Noodles & Company and the now-closed Gordmans.
All the current active tenants will continue operations, but the developers are working on a proposed $30 million project called Pacifica of Burnsville that would bring an Asian grocery store, a food hall with 10 food vendors plus a new addition housing two restaurants to the empty Gordmans.
That's the endeavor that could benefit from the city of Burnsville's $1.1 million in grant funding.
"Burnsville Center itself, it's a dying mall. ... It was mismanaged throughout the years," said Marshall Nguyen, a partner with Pacific Square Burnsville, one of the project's developers. "Our goal is to come in and help revitalize it."