On a trip to Minneapolis to work with Midway Contemporary Art on designing its new building, Roberta Jurčić, an architect and partner with b+, a Berlin-based architecture firm specializing in adaptive reuse, witnessed something unusual.
Midway Contemporary Art’s Executive Director John Rasmussen was hammering into the dirt with a shovel at the gallery’s new location in northeast Minneapolis.
“Usually you wouldn’t see the client, or like the founder of the gallery, digging a pit for the elevator,” Jurčić said. “And there is their son who is also there, digging the whole thing.”
Such is the community-oriented approach to building the new Midway Contemporary Art, a nonprofit arts organization that recently found its permanent home after two decades of renting. The entire project cost around $1 million, with the help of grants from the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Climate Initiative and many others.

A cornerstone of the Twin Cities art community for more than 20 years, Midway is particularly interested in working with artists who have never shown in the Midwest, or even in the United States. It also showcases local favorites like Pao Houa Her and Tetsuya Yamada.
Rasmussen and Megan McCready bought the building at 1509 NE. Marshall St. in November 2021, after leaving their previous space in the Marcy Holmes neighborhood. Construction began in January 2023. From the start, they wanted to be extremely environmentally conscious.
“As we would take drywall down, Kelsey the programming manager would post it on Facebook marketplace,” Rasmussen said. “Everything from the building was being taken away for scrap metal, or reused in other buildings, like the toilets, furnaces, went to a nonprofit. We were trying not to throw something away.”
The grand reopening exhibition is Aug. 1 with a show by artist K.R.M. Mooney titled “reserves,” which includes some of the materials from the old space.