There's no slowdown on teardowns in Edina.
Demolition permits are on a record pace, about 26 percent ahead of last year, which also set a record. Recently, seven new applications came in on a single day.
Last year, the city hired a residential redevelopment coordinator to enforce teardown rules, educate builders and deal with frustrated neighbors. In her 16 months on the job, Cindy Larson has barely had time to catch her breath. "There hasn't been a lull ever since I started, that's for sure," she said.
Teardowns have become a chronic, divisive issue in many built-up neighborhoods across the Twin Cities metro area. Minneapolis had a short-lived moratorium on teardowns this year, and St. Paul has wrestled with the issue in its Highland Park neighborhood. But Edina, home to some of the highest house and land values in the metro area, is in many ways the epicenter of the phenomenon.
The pace of teardowns reflects evolving demographics in the affluent suburb, as well as the improving economy and the lure of its vaunted school system. Builders and many residents herald the phenomenon, but it also has some citizens wincing.
The majority of teardowns have been concentrated in several eastern Edina hot spots between Hwy. 100 and the Minneapolis border. But western neighborhoods like Countryside and Indian Hills also have seen significant activity.
Proponents of redevelopment say the city is renewing its aging housing stock and raising the tax base.
"Currently, who lives in these homes are older women, typically widows, and they're looking for an exit strategy," said Andy Porter, a partner in Refined Custom Homes, a builder active in Edina. "They win. They move on, and we change the tax base from $300,000 to $1 million. And now there's a family in that [new] house with two kids and a dog."