When neighbors vehemently opposed a plan to build an apartment complex on city-owned land across from a popular lake, leaders in Vadnais Heights took an unusual tack.
They scrapped their plans for the apartments, gave back about $1 million in grant funding that they had obtained to clean up the 3-acre site, and instead asked residents what they thought should go there.
The residents' answer: a destination brewery or distillery with views of scenic Lake Vadnais, providing a community gathering space and perhaps even a rooftop patio.
So city leaders have agreed to aggressively market the site for that purpose, sending out nearly 340 letters this month to existing brewers and distillers who may be looking to expand.
Vadnais Heights Mayor Heidi Gunderson said they want to build trust with the city's 13,000 residents, many of whom view redevelopment with a cynical eye. This was a chance to draw back the curtain and allow residents to learn more about how the process works, and the fact that the property is owned by the city offered a unique opportunity.
"Change is really hard in communities like ours," said Gunderson, in her second year as mayor. People have a strong attachment to the feel of their community. That is where change becomes really difficult."
The same growing pains are being felt across the Twin Cities. Market forces driving the recent redevelopment boom have pushed leaders in the suburbs, many long dominated by single-family neighborhoods, into approval of taller and denser apartment complexes, senior living and mixed-use projects more compact and urban than the homes that drew many there in the first place.
It's spawned intense battles at city halls and even courtrooms across the region. For instance, Ramsey County and Arden Hills continue to be locked in a legal battle over redevelopment of the 427-acre former Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant site.