YWCA Minneapolis is selling its longtime Uptown fitness facility and pool to a nonprofit that will convert the space into a workforce development and job training hub.
The 80,000-square-foot building, which has housed the YWCA programs for nearly 40 years, will be sold for $4.25 million to Tending the Soil, a coalition of nonprofits and unions led by Black, Indigenous and people of color .
“We are very excited. We have big dreams,” said Emilia Gonzalez Avalos, executive director of Unidos MN, one of the nonprofits with Tending the Soil. “There’s an opportunity to again bring more vibrancy to the corridor.”
She said the organizations have been planning a workforce development center for years, but the initiative took on more urgency during the COVID-19 pandemic. The sale of the Uptown facility, which is near W. Lake Street and includes an 185-spot parking ramp, is expected to close at the end of June.
The YWCA shocked the community last summer with news that it would close its Uptown and downtown fitness centers and pools Nov. 1. Both buildings are in high-profile corridors of the city: one on Nicollet Mall downtown since 1929 and the second in Uptown on Hennepin Avenue since 1987.
This month, the YWCA announced it was selling its downtown building to St. David’s Center for Child and Family Development, a Minnetonka nonprofit that provides mental health and autism services to children. The purchase price wasn’t disclosed by either nonprofit.
The YWCA still operates in a building in Midtown, but after closing the other two facilities, the organization laid off 45 employees — about 13% of its workforce.
The closings also meant about 300 swimmers in the YWCA’s Otters and Masters swim teams had to find new swimming clubs, including at South High School and Southwest High School.