It takes 20 minutes to walk from the Xcel Energy Center to CHS Field on St. Paul’s 5th Street, a route dotted with other beloved downtown destinations — the Ordway and Landmark Center, Rice and Mears parks, the St. Paul Farmers’ Market.
Pedestrians on that sidewalk also pass the Central Station light rail stop, where the entrance to the skyways has been padlocked for more than a year after a double homicide there. They encounter the boarded-up storefronts of the Endicott Arcade, a century-old galleria that in 2021 was deemed unfit for occupancy. They stride by Momento, a Mediterranean restaurant that opened and closed in the last two years.
A trip down 5th Street spotlights many of the struggles downtowns have experienced across the country even before the shock of the COVID-19 pandemic: vacant office buildings, shuttered storefronts, declining property values, sidewalks populated by the homeless.
But to St. Paul leaders, that walk also is ripe for envisioning a more vibrant downtown — and strategizing how to manifest it.
Offices could be converted to apartments with the help of state and city incentives. A street reconstruction could make it safer and better for pedestrians. Multimillion-dollar redevelopments of the Xcel Center and Central Station could bring new life to key parts of the neighborhood.
“If we don’t do anything, there’s a real risk for downtown to follow a path of disinvestment and a kind of downward spiral — and the consequences of that are not just dire for those of us who love it here or who live here or work here,” said Joe Spencer, president of the nonprofit St. Paul Downtown Alliance, which recently published a 117-page report recommending public and private investments in downtown.
At the crux of its strategy is the belief that drawing more residents, workers and visitors downtown will solve many of the problems. The civic and business leaders involved with the plan’s creation don’t know how much it will cost, but it’s clear substantial government funding is expected as a catalyst.
”I think it’s a moment of reckoning for downtown,” said Richard Dobransky, president of Morrissey Hospitality, a portfolio that includes Roy Wilkins Auditorium, the St. Paul Hotel and the recently closed Momento. “Because if we don’t do something, then nothing’s going to happen, so it will continue on the path of being worse.”