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Nicollet Island, East Bank and Marcy Holmes![]() Photo by Craig Bares
It wasn’t that long ago that long-time East Bank wine shop Surdyk’s was nearly the only thing going in this once lonely stretch of downtown. “It was a very depressed area,” acknowledges owner Jim Surdyk. But within the last five years, retail and residential developments have bloomed around his business, from tony clothing, baby, and cooking shops to independent restaurants and bars, and the brand-new and long-sought full-service Lunds grocery store on Central and University. Surdyk credits the condo boom with injecting new life into his neighborhood. No fewer than eight new developments have either come online or are planned, bringing in a potential 1,667 new units of housing. “I’m very excited about all the people who want to live in urban dwellings in downtown Minneapolis,” he says. “You see this kind of movement in cities like New York and Chicago, too, and it’s going to make Minneapolis that much stronger.” Despite the condo boom, the Nicollet Island, East Bank, and Mary Holmes neighborhoods are still among the most underdeveloped, says Diane Hofstede, the area’s City Council member for Ward 3. Yet their proximity to the Mississippi, the rest of downtown, and the University of Minnesota make it critical to balance many competing needs to get development right. “The area is an extension of the Convention Center and the downtown entertainment district,” Hofstede says. “At the same time, use of the river is another piece.” It will be a big job to encourage the right mix of business, residential and homeownership, and retail opportunities, balanced against the need for sustainable and environmentally sound development, she says. “There’s a lot of potential.” Among the new and up-and-coming neighborhood developments: Lunds and Cobalt Condominiums East Bank Mills “It will retain the historic flavor, add additional housing, and I think it will have some lovely views of the river and falls area,” Hofstede says. A private street running through the site will provide access to a vine-covered parking ramp, which may also contain small shops. Main Street will house restaurants, coffee shops, retail stores, and outdoor cafes. Construction is scheduled to begin this spring. Flour Sack Flats The Soap Factory Gopher Stadium Hofstede says all of the recent and ongoing development in the Nicollet Island, East Bank, and Marcy Holmes neighborhoods will refocus attention on the area as a desirable place to live. “More attention is going to be given to this area because of its proximity to downtown,” she says. “We’re close to the commercial corridors that have a lot of potential, and we don’t have quite as high housing costs as some other areas of the city.” –S.A.
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