DULUTH — When Park Point resident Dan O'Neill was offered nearly twice the estimated value of his home, he didn't immediately accept.
He'd lived on the Lake Superior side of the 7-mile-long sand spit, also known as Minnesota Point, most of his life. Although he had turned away interest in his property many times in the past, he'd planned to sell it in the next couple of years.
"We slept on the offer," he said, and woke up thinking they'd never see such a generous proposal again. "Not even close."
O'Neill agreed to $825,000 for his rambler on a property that St. Louis County valued this year at about $477,000.
It's one of 10 Park Point property sales made in the last year to a limited liability company managed by Kathy Cargill, a member of the billionaire Cargill family. Seven of the houses have been razed, with permits issued for the demolition of two others. Rumors are swirling that another three sales — that would make six in a row on the north end of Minnesota Avenue — are in negotiations.
No one seems to know for sure what might become of the properties, many of which were sold at twice their estimated value — or more. The LLC bought about half of the single-family houses sold on Park Point last year, with the median price of all sold homes about $477,000, according to Lake Superior Area Realtors.
The purchases have ignited worry over their effect on property taxes and the loss of sorely needed single-family housing, along with responsible development of the fragile and historically significant land, long struggling with erosion.
Park Point has many small older cottages, some passed down through generations. The neighborhood had humble beginnings more than a century ago, when many residents heated their homes with driftwood from the beach and coal that fell from freighters and washed up on the shore.