Arguably the most out-of-date building along the busiest stretch of France Avenue in Edina is a step closer to demolition.
The Edina City Council gave the preliminary OK on Tuesday to a land use plan that would bring a four-building, mixed-use development to the Macy’s Furniture Gallery site. The council is expected to take a final vote in August.
The “earth-sheltered” building currently on the site opened in the late 1970s. It is sunk into the ground and surrounded on two sides by parking lots.
“All of us have been driving by this site for years and looking at that bunker,” Mayor Jim Hovland said Tuesday night during a four-hour council meeting largely devoted to the site.
“This is one of the best pieces of property in town,” Hovland said of the land between France Avenue and the Edina Promenade.
Developer Enclave Companies plans four buildings for the site with a mix of housing, offices, retail and restaurants. The tallest will be an 11-story building on the southwest corner of the property. Three others will rise seven stories.
The development could cost up to $350 million by the time it is completed in 2028. It includes more than 500 apartments and 49 condos, with 10% of the units meeting the city’s affordable housing guidelines.
Each building has a parking ramp, and there’s minimal street parking.