Soccer fans returning to St. Paul’s Midway neighborhood for the Loons home opener last weekend found the view little changed from the year before. Allianz Field remains perched in a barren landscape of surface parking lots.
Excitement about what could emerge here has been brewing since 2016, when the master plan for a mixed-use development surrounding the stadium was approved. But those plans have been pushed out and scaled back.
In the coming months, United Village developers say they will build a sculpture garden, featuring a 33-foot statue of a loon, and an all-abilities playground as the first part of that vision.
That can’t come soon enough for many locals and business owners. They have held onto hope that redevelopment around the stadium would lift the fortunes of a neighborhood that welcomed the stadium but was then scarred by riots and arson following the Minneapolis police murder of George Floyd in 2020.
Wes Burdine, owner of a nearby bar called Black Hart of Saint Paul, said owners of vacant properties in the surrounding neighborhood are reluctant to move forward on redevelopment until they see construction start around Allianz Field.
“I think that’s the biggest [frustration] around the slow pace of that development, it’s how the other dominoes haven’t yet begun to go,” Burdine said. “So that means development of all these other empty storefronts and lots around the neighborhood are still many years away.”
Dr. Bill McGuire, managing partner of Minnesota United and the lead developer for the “super block” surrounding Allianz Field, is counseling patience.
“We’re trying to do this and fulfill these things. But sometimes it takes time,” McGuire said. “It will be a great place that people want to go to.”