Minneapolis Park Board President Jono Cowgill vowed to resurrect a $5.1 million proposal to rebuild the Bde Maka Ska pavilion, after it was unexpectedly canceled in committee last week despite a monthslong public engagement process and tens of thousands of dollars spent.
Park Board staff recently presented plans to replace the former site of Lola's on the Lake, which had been one of the park system's most popular attractions before burning down in a $2 million hookah fire in 2019.
The new pavilion would be built in the same spot on the northeast side of the lake with a large vendor hall, all-gender bathroom, performance nook and steps leading into the water. The project had been pitched to seven neighborhood organizations. More than 500 people responded to an online survey.
But the project died in planning committee on May 5 when Commissioner Meg Forney objected to the proposed location.
Congestion caused by a cluster of amenities on the northeast side of the lake, near Uptown, had been a major focal point of the 2017 Bde Maka Ska-Harriet Master Plan. That corner had a sailing school, boat launch, Wheel Fun rentals as well as the lake's only concessions. The master plan called for relocating the sailing school to the northwest corner, where it would have more room.
But when the unexpected destruction of the Bde Maka Ska pavilion meant it had to be rebuilt for millions, the Park Board couldn't afford to do both, said Michael Schroeder, assistant superintendent of planning.
Forney proposed moving the second iteration of the pavilion to the northwest corner instead. "The main thrust of the master plan was to share the wealth," she argued. "Although nobody anticipated the loss of the refectory, it has happened. … Instead of looking at it as a loss and something catastrophic, this is a huge opportunity for us."
Commissioner LaTrisha Vetaw supported Forney's motion to table the issue, but they were defeated by Planning Committee Chairman Chris Meyer, Steffanie Musich and Londel French.