After 30 years of peddling Southern comfort food in the heart of St. Paul, Dixie's On Grand owner Peter Kenefick is ready to retire the restaurant and put a five-story building in its place.
Kenefick, 64, said if the $32.5 million mixed-use project is approved, it will serve as his legacy. Judging by the reactions of his Summit Hill neighbors, Kenefick's legacy either will spark a resurgence of excitement and commerce along Grand or eclipse the charm of its historic neighborhood.
"I want this to be beautiful," he said of the project he hopes will replace the "tired" one-floor building and parking lot at the corner of 695 Grand Av. "I want this to get people saying, 'What's going on at 695?' "
M.L. Kucera, who lives directly across St. Albans from the Dixie's parking lot, fears a massive new building will make it hard to see anything going on to the west of her third-floor condo, including sunsets.
"I am in favor of some development there," she said, adding that three floors would be more appropriate. "But I would like to see something more in keeping with the height of this neighborhood and with the look of it."
But while neighbors such as Kucera stress over a level of housing density that is heretofore unseen in this area of stately mansions and brownstone walk-ups, others welcome the needed boost it could bring to Grand Avenue. Over the past few years, many have noticed a steady thinning of traffic along what was once one of St. Paul's premier commercial corridors.
"We live in a city. It's a city. We should expect city density," said Dan Marshall, who opened his Mischief toy store on Grand five years ago. "We need housing everywhere in St. Paul. … We need to say yes to housing on Grand Avenue."
Kenefick, a 1974 graduate of Highland Park Senior High who bought the building that now houses Dixie's, Saji-Ya and Emmett's Public House 35 years ago, has partnered with the St. Louis Park-based development firm Reuter Walton and is in the process of seeking city approval.