DULUTH – The city is asking a judge for permission to tear down at least part of the historic Pastoret Terrace building after it was damaged by a fire in November.
The structure, formerly home to the Kozy Bar, has been the subject of legal battles dating back to 2018, when the building's former owner and a local preservation group sued to protect it from demolition.
A structural assessment of the property, which was conducted by an engineering firm in the wake of the Nov. 1 fire, said the blaze collapsed a portion of the building's roof, destroyed sizable sections of its interior and further deteriorated the brick-and-mortar facade.
"The exterior regions should be sufficiently cordoned off to ensure the public is not within areas which could be jeopardized in the event of sudden collapse of a wall or other building element," the assessment from LHB Inc. said.
In a memorandum to St. Louis County Judge Eric Hylden filed Monday, Assistant City Attorney Betsy Sellers wrote that demolition of at least the most-damaged portion of the property is necessary "to protect the public and remove this ticking time bomb."
"With this fire, the material facts of the case have changed significantly: partial demolition is now required in the near term for public safety, and historic rehabilitation is no longer even a possibility in the long term," Sellers wrote.
But Eric Ringsred, who lost the building through tax forfeiture in 2015, is still fighting to save the 19th-century property that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Duluth Economic Development Authority (DEDA), a city agency, purchased the Pastoret Terrace property in 2016 with the hopes of knocking it down to make way for development downtown.