A revamped proposal for a nearly full-block redevelopment of a vintage McDonald's in Dinkytown will be among four large apartment projects totaling nearly 1,200 units combined that will be reviewed this week by a Minneapolis Planning Commission panel.
After a contentious reception, Chicago-based CA Ventures revamped the Dinkytown project, slashing the height of the original 25-story tower first pitched for the site several years ago.
That project is not far from where a partnership that includes another Chicago-based developer is submitting revised plans for a 12-story student-housing project including 274 units with 810 bedrooms and 2,500 square feet of commercial space at 801 SE. 15th Av.
Also up for review is a project in the Harrison neighborhood in north Minneapolis, where Wellington Management wants to build Currie Commons, a mixed-use building with 198 income-restricted rentals and one retail tenant on a former industrial site 187 N. Humboldt Av.
And in the nearby North Loop neighborhood, the commission will also review plans for what's known as the Duffey Paper project, which includes the adaptive reuse of two warehouse buildings and construction of a mixed-use building with 351 rental units and about 50,000 square feet of commercial space.
The McDonald's Dinkytown site has been in play the longest.
CA Ventures has been working for several years to redevelop a portion of that block, which fronts SE. 15th Avenue between SE. 4th and 5th streets in an area near the University of Minnesota where residents and business owners have hotly debated the height and density of the building that would replace storefronts that some deem historic.
CA Ventures has been assembling parcels for the project for several years and originally pitched a 25-story apartment building in an area where the maximum height limit is just four stories. Late last year the developer rolled out a new plan that called for a nine-story building with 300 rental units and 23,000 square feet of commercial space, including three commercial spaces that would face SE. 4th Street and a large commercial space fronting SE. 5th Street.