The 19 Bar, the popular, windowless gay dive of Loring Park, reopened this past week, making its comeback from a freak accident last year, when a garbage truck plowed into a power pole and set the bar ablaze.
The fire closed what had been a trusty space for the hyper-dense neighborhood’s renters. After a year of reconstruction, rainbow lights now line the 19’s roof, a flashy addition to what had always been a dark and understated façade.
Owner Gary Hallberg could have cut his losses, torn down the 19 and sold it to a developer, said longtime employee Eric Franson, because in recent years much of the neighborhood’s aging commercial stock has gone that way to builders of high-rises.
Everyone’s grateful “he didn’t sell us out,” said Franson. The single-minded focus for the past year had been to “get the old girl back to where she was for the neighbors and the community.”

For many in the storied “gayborhood'' on the edge of downtown Minneapolis, the 19 Bar’s reopening has been a much needed win, said City Council Member Katie Cashman. Such causes for celebration have been elusive in recent years, she acknowledged, as business closures and violent crime dampened local spirits. Recovery, some say, has been complicated by the neighborhood’s high hospitality taxes for an unequal share of public safety services. Still, some things are starting to look up.
Across the namesake park – the site of Minneapolis’ original Pride protest half a century ago – the nonprofit Twin Cities Pride has planted its flag after opening an LGBTQ arts and cultural center on Harmon Place this month, thanks to the city partly subsidizing the rent. TC Pride also brought its Rainbow Wardrobe, offering free clothing for LGBTQ people, into Loring Park with the promise of year-round career fairs, art shows and classes.
Executive Director Andi Otto said TC Pride wanted to offer constant resources, not just one celebration in June, to the neighborhood that remains the center of Minneapolis’ LGBTQ heritage at a time when LGBTQ rights nationally are under attack.
TC Pride wanted to be part of the change in Loring Park, said Otto, because it still serves as the first stop for many transplants nostalgic for bigger, more urbane cities, as well as those seeking refuge from less tolerant states.