The streets lining the Midtown Greenway are busier than ever, as more than 1,000 luxury apartments rise over what was a dreary stretch of Uptown only several years ago.
In view of Jenny Crump's perch on the rooftop of the Lime Apartments is the biking trail and rows of new buildings alongside it. Cranes stretch in the distance. Farther down are the Flux apartments and Bar Louie, which opened in 2012 but already feel more like established landmarks.
"It's a much bigger, much more active city than I thought," said Crump, a New Yorker who moved with her husband to a $2,200-a month apartment at Lime this month.
The explosive growth has raised some concerns over whether more affordable housing is needed amid buildings where a studio can run $1,200 a month, and prompted worries that the very people who give Uptown its hip and funky vibe could be priced out.
"It's just not us," Matt Barthelemy, who works at Common Roots on 26th and Lyndale. He appreciates the new money flowing into Uptown but worries that the neighborhood is losing its soul. "The more and more luxury apartments we see go up, the more corporations and chain stores we see go up, the more homogenized it is," he said.
Even community boosters say they'd like to see some moderately priced homes in the development boom.
"The one hope is we do get some more … affordable housing," said Soren Jensen, who is otherwise a cheerleader of the new developments and heads the Midtown Greenway Coalition.
Council Member Lisa Bender, who represents the area, is working on an initiative that could encourage developers to include affordable units in their buildings — not that she is trying to dull the enthusiasm about Uptown's new high-end housing.