The largest public housing renovation project in Minnesota has brought modern fire safety systems and upgraded living spaces to two downtown Minneapolis high-rise apartment buildings.
The $26 million project at the Elliot Twins, now about halfway finished, has also calmed residents who believed the Minneapolis Public Housing Authority's use of private financing would lead to gentrification and permanent displacement.
"That fear has gone away at least for now," said Omar Mohamed, Minneapolis Highrise Representative Council's vice president and a resident of the high-rise. "Everyone is getting upgraded units."
Renovation of the first tower, which will get four new units, is expected to be complete by mid-March. So far, residents have been relocated into 87 upgraded apartments.
Some of the features include new central air conditioning, upgraded kitchens, bathrooms and new finished flooring. Expanded laundry facilities, exercise rooms, a central entrance with a single security desk and a computer room will open to residents in March.
And for the first time, the Housing Authority is installing fire sprinklers and upgrading the fire alarm system in all the units in the Elliot Twins, which were built in 1961. The need for bringing the authority's aging buildings up to modern safety codes became tragically clear in November 2019, when a lack of sprinklers at the agency's Cedar High Apartments enabled the spread of a fire that killed five residents.
When all eight phases are completed by midsummer, the Elliot Twins will have increased its units to 184 — 10 of those units will be disability-accessible units.
The Housing Authority said 90% of its tenants decided to stay during the renovations. The agency said it has covered all moving expenses including those within the Elliot Twins and promised the 14 residents who temporarily vacated their units "a right to return" when the project finished.