The owners of the Minnesota Vikings announced a major foray into Minnesota philanthropy Wednesday, a Wilf Family Center at the University of Minnesota's Masonic Children's Hospital in Minneapolis.
The $5 million center, unveiled Wednesday, features an auditorium and high-tech conference rooms. It marks a significant leap into Minnesota philanthropy for the New Jersey-based Wilf Family Foundation, which has focused on causes in New York and New Jersey.
The children's hospital gift represents the Wilfs' largest single donation in Minnesota. Vikings co-owner Zygi Wilf said he expected his family's charitable giving in Minnesota to grow.
"We look forward to a long, strong commitment to Minnesota and the Twin Cities community," Wilf said.
Bobbi Daniels, CEO of University of Minnesota Physicians, gave the Wilfs a tour of the 11,000-square-foot addition, which will be used both by children staying at the hospital and by U physicians for training and research-sharing.
"The University of Minnesota Masonic Children's Hospital is known for treating the most serious childhood illnesses and performing many 'firsts' in pediatric medicine," Daniels said. "The Wilf Family Center transforms how we can share that expertise."
The donation comes at a time when the Vikings continue to come under fire for the stadium-funding package that left Minnesota taxpayers footing more than half the cost of the billion-dollar stadium, and for a court ruling that found the Wilfs guilty of defrauding their former New Jersey business partners.
The Vikings co-owners said there was nothing special about the timing of the $5 million contribution. The Vikings have made considerable financial contributions in Minnesota, said Mark Wilf, adding, "This is just a continuation."