Lake Street's Plaza Verde building, once vacant and rundown, now hums with the activity of barbers, tae kwon do classes, dentists and nonprofit agencies.
And the hub of immigrant businesses and community gathering space appears to be gaining momentum. It has attracted a private buyer, about a dozen years after the city-subsidized renovation of the building at Lake Street and Bloomington Avenue S. The change of hands from its nonprofit ownership, which is still not finalized, also will pay down a chunk of the city's initial investment.
The expected purchaser is Khadar Adan, a Seattle resident and East African immigrant who plans to move his family to Minneapolis. "I love the building because the way that it was rehabilitated, it [was] done very well," he said.
While the transaction would be a jolt of investment for a project that has had trouble meeting expenses in recent years, the City Council member who represents the area wants to ensure that it remains a home to immigrant entrepreneurs and an accessible event space in line with existing plans for the area.
"It's one of the projects that helped to create that Latino identity for the corridor," said Council Member Alondra Cano, who is particularly concerned about the possibility of rising rents.
Adan, who plans to renovate the building's third-floor ballroom, said that he would honor the current leases and that he intends to continue the small-businesses focus of the building. He has heard from prospective tenants at nearby East African malls who are interested in relocating there, for example.
"We are not changing the current [tenants]. We will renegotiate the leases after the leases expire," Adan said, adding that any changes would be "very fair."
On the upswing
The 41,000-square-foot building is one of several Lake Street business incubators overseen by the nonprofit Neighborhood Development Center (NDC) — the majority owner of Plaza Verde — that are now seeing better returns after rocky financial news in recent years.