Environmental activists embroiled in a decade-long fight with Minneapolis over a prime slice of real estate in the East Phillips neighborhood are seeing victory on the horizon, as investors and volunteers line up to help realize their dream of an indoor urban farm.
East Phillips Neighborhood Institute (EPNI) organizers have spent this spring knocking on doors in south Minneapolis, recruiting business tenants and drumming up excitement for redeveloping the former Roof Depot warehouse. A $100,000 federal grant will help EPNI and its partner Cooperative Energy Futures explore building one the nation’s largest urban solar arrays on the roof. Another $20,000 grant from the Mississippi Watershed Management Organization will help design a stormwater harvesting system.
Pro-bono lawyers from top firms, including Faegre Drinker and Fredrikson and Byron, are helping draft an experimental community ownership model designed to cycle wealth back into East Phillips. Mortenson Construction and Loeffler Construction are offering free pre-construction services.
And while the city had contemplated tearing down the warehouse, the EPNI development team has been pleased to find it in better condition than expected. Though vandals have stripped the building’s electrical systems for copper and earlier forklift collisions have dented column flanges, the “bones” of the building are “perfect,” said Ahti Westphal of DJR Architecture, who is working to get the urban farm permitted.
“It’s nicer than most warehouse storefronts that are new build,” he said. “After hearing so much about it, and then going into the building several times, it’s like how could [the city] ever rationalize tearing it down? It’s given me, personally, a lot of confidence.”
But a major step still remains: EPNI must first close on its purchase of the property from the city — a deal that’s well on its way but could run into a major obstacle if state lawmakers do not dedicate funding to the project before they adjourn the session later this month.
Roof Depot sale
The Roof Depot site, at 1860 E. 28th St. and 2717 Longfellow Av., belongs to the city, which had long resisted pressure to sell in hopes of demolishing the warehouse and replacing it with a new public works water yard.
After nearly 10 years of protests, costly environmental lawsuits and marathon City Council debates, members of the Minneapolis legislative delegation brokered three conditions under which the city would agree to sell Roof Depot to EPNI for $11.4 million: The Legislature had to secure $2 million toward the purchase price in 2023 (completed), EPNI had to raise $3.7 million in private funds (proof posted last fall) and the Legislature would need to appropriate more money — another $5.7 million in 2024.