Official street signs label the frontage road south of Interstate 94 as Concordia Avenue, but St. Paul City Council Member Russel Balenger says that many longtime residents of the area have never stopped using a former name: Rondo Avenue.
As one of his last acts before leaving the council, Balenger is leading a charge to restore the name of the road that once served as the main artery of the storied Rondo neighborhood — the social, cultural and commercial heart of St. Paul's Black community for much of the 20th century.
When the freeway was constructed in the 1950s and '60s, it destroyed more than 1,000 homes and businesses in Rondo, many of them owned by African Americans. Balenger's family was one of the first forced to move out in 1957, when he was 8 years old.
Much of Rondo Avenue disappeared, and part of what remained was renamed Concordia Avenue in 1964 in honor of the nearby college — a decision made by the City Council without public discussion, according to Balenger.
"It was one thing to take your home and your community and destroy it," he said. "But then when they erased the name, that was just adding insult to injury."

On Wednesday, Balenger plans to introduce a resolution to restore the Rondo name to a stretch of Concordia Avenue between Griggs and Mackubin streets, and a stretch of St. Anthony Avenue from Western Avenue to Rice Street. The public will have a chance to testify at the meeting before the council takes a final vote, said Dan Dodge, Balenger's aide.
Rev. Brian Friedrich, president of Concordia University, already has sent a letter expressing support for the proposal to flip the street name from Concordia to Rondo.
Balenger, who was appointed to the council in August 2022 to fill a vacant seat, secured $23,000 in the city's 2024 budget to swap out street signs and assist property owners affected by the change.