An artificial stream in a park-like setting attracts joggers and dog walkers to St. Paul’s Highland Bridge development. Children flock to the playground at Assembly Union Park, named in honor of the Ford Motor Co. plant that for decades operated on more than 100 acres in city’s southwestern corner.
In every direction, however, metal construction fences surround large piles of dirt — and it’s unclear when that will change.
Parks, roads, utilities and other public infrastructure at the Highland Bridge site are on track to be completed by the end of 2025, on budget and on schedule.
Meanwhile, plans for thousands of new privately developed apartment units remain on pause. They’re the victim of rising construction costs, soaring interest rates and the rent stabilization law approved by St. Paul voters that brought much residential construction to a halt.
The Highland Bridge redevelopment agreement, approved after extensive public debate in 2019, included plans for 3,800 new housing units, as well as ample space for offices, retail and recreation.
“The vision for the site was established pre-pandemic and with very different market conditions,” said Melanie McMahon, the city’s executive project lead for redevelopment. “It’s just a different world that we’re in right now.”
As a result, developers and city officials are talking about reducing the density of housing and other changes that could get dirt moving on those vacant parcels.
“Given the circumstances of the market, we should be willing to consider changes that may result in either some degree of lesser density or some degree of lesser housing units,” said Nicolle Goodman, the city’s planning and economic development director. “We have to do the math and do the analysis of what’s feasible at this point.”