Two summers ago, when Ryan Burnet and Victor Mills started a program that introduced north Minneapolis kids to the rigors of boxing, they couldn't find a gym in the area.
Burnet, a restaurateur (Barrio, Bar La Grassa, Burch Steak and Pizza Bar, Eastside), and Mills, a retired police officer, ended up driving kids to a facility on the opposite side of the city.
"We'd pick them up at 9 a.m., and they would come to the car with a bag of Cheetos and a can of Mountain Dew," said Burnet. "It was immediately obvious that, in this program, nutrition is as relevant as boxing."
Which is why, when the program developed into the just-opened Fighting Chance Boxing Club, the new North Side facility contains a kitchen. A very busy kitchen.
Blight, reborn
The building, a handsome Works Progress Adminstration firehouse from 1939, sat vacant for 11 vandalism-bait years before nonprofit Fighting Chance bought it for $40,000.
"If this were in any other part of the state, it would have been picked up in a heartbeat," said Burnet. "I knew I wanted something permanent, and in their neighborhood. A place that they could walk to. And boy, have they ever."
After a major fundraising effort, another $840,000 was invested in a renovation. Donors — companies, foundations, individuals — stepped up with cash and equipment, everything from countertops to the boxing ring to a much-needed commercial refrigerator.
"The building was a blight on the neighborhood, a liability," said Burnet. "Now, we open the doors, and all this energy goes out into the streets."