The downtown Minneapolis pub sold roughly 27,000 pints of the imported ale last year.
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Hoping to fill the space above a parking ramp near the new Vikings stadium, Ryan Companies pitched a $104 million, 28-story apartment tower with commercial space and Mortenson Development proposed a $63 million, 300-room hotel.
The Minneapolis-based biotech company hired James Hippel to replace Greg Melsen, who served shortly as interim CEO left the company after it named a permanent replacement.
The U.S. Small Business Administration is offering local small business owners and CEOs an MBA-like curriculum meant to help them grow.
The nonprofit has added several local stores in the past couple of years and is now considering a new location in St. Paul.
The money will be allocated across 10 different redevelopment projects, more than half of which are in Minneapolis.
A local brings a dubious crown back to Minnesota.
Vascular Solutions reached a settlement agreement, resolving a whistleblower lawsuit that drew the attention of Texas’ U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Munich Re recently opened a new regional office in Minnetonka to provide insurance underwriting, actuarial, and executive management services.
Best Buy, Allianz, and Smiths Medical ranked among 125 companies that excel in “harnessing human capital,” according to Training magazine.
While Buffalo Wild Wings saw a 25 percent increase in profit and C.H. Robinson saw a 65 percent decrease, the price of both companies’ stocks dropped Wednesday.
The hole-in-the-wall music venue will re-emerge as a “music complex” and is gaining some serious square-footage with its move to the fourth floor of the megamall.
The company keeps growing despite new competition from regional craft brewers.
The Hard Rock Café, which is known largely for its music-memorabilia décor, is hiring managers to oversee a planned location at the Mall of America.
The Clinton Group claimed in a recent letter that ValueVision broke state law by not holding a special shareholders meeting 90 days after it was requested—but the Minnesota company argues that Clinton’s original request was invalid.
Target Chief Financial Officer John Mulligan said Tuesday that the malware, which infiltrated the retailer’s point of sale system, remained on a select number of registers for three days after the company said it had eradicated the problem.