Though slight, the change marked the first decline in seven years.
Real Estate
Projects calls for 201 new rooms in downtown Minneapolis.
Minneapolis-St. Paul is 10th market for new service from the company best known for its online real estate listings.
The 100-plus page report included 18 possible locations and endorsements from local CEOs, but maximum value of possible state, local incentives never calculated.
Just one year after completing a $36 million office building in North Minneapolis, the largest minority-owned construction company ran into irrevocable financial woes.
The expansion of the company’s Armament Systems unit headquarters is expected to generate 60 new jobs, and will receive $1.3 million in financial support from DEED.
The Twin Cities’ first Life Time Work is now open in St. Louis Park, and filling up fast. More are planned locally and nationwide.
Bucking the co-working trend, wealth advisor Nicole Mittendorf invests in her business by laying down roots in Minnetonka.
No announced leases have been made beyond the food hall.
The shift comes as many are calling for more renter inclusion in neighborhood organizations as part of Minneapolis’ Neighborhoods 2020 plan.
Everything You Need to Know About Minneapolis’ Upper Harbor Terminal Project—And What Happens Next
The massive plan to turn 48 acres of riverfront land into housing, businesses and an outdoor performance venue was approved Friday. Here's a look at the costs and the challenges ahead.
The 60,000-square-foot space will open this July in The Nordic, an under-construction building in the North Loop.
The Fenley is the latest project at the Bloomington Central Station site.
Shared workspace options are growing at a rapid clip, although The Riveter focuses on women workers and entrepreneurs.
Groundwater pollution from old construction materials has prompted the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency to look at revamping landfill rules.
We explore the benefits and challenges of the mixed-use development approach.
RJM Construction is forcing a sheriff’s sale on the arts center’s Minneapolis headquarters after incurring extraneous expenses from a top-to-bottom renovation it was hired to complete.
Del Campo Chacon’s eviction fight — part of a larger struggle among a group of families living in five Frenz properties on the same block — is a new chapter in a long story, one that includes allegations of fraud, unsanitary conditions, rent strikes and city intervention.