Victoria Park 18 years later

Plans for the land that used to be a tank farm owned by Kock and Mobile Oil or maybe it was Kock/mobile.  I have lived in the area long enough so that if I try hard I can still see the large oil tanks.

I was in the room in the mid-1990’s when the Ford Road Federation (district council 9 started talking about housing on the site.  I was there for the ground breaking in 2003  for what was going to be the biggest housing development ever within the city limits of St. Paul.

Some town houses were finished and ready to sell just after the housing boom and they sat vacant.  no one would buy them and no more townhouses were built.  Eventually, there were rented out. 

victoriapark 1
Victoria Park 2008

Plans changed and part of the site was used for Nova Classical Academy and some of it will be made into a city park and now at leas the town houses that were built are not so lonely as the site is being used for Victoria Park Luxury apartments.  

luxury appartments
luxury apartments

The apartments are 1, 2 and 3 bedroom and range in size from 542 square feet to over 2000 square feet.  Current rental rates are 1050 to 2025.  There is an impressive list of amenities and the land is near the river trails and park lands.

Healthy neighborhoods need all types of housing and it will be good for the neighborhood.  I sure hope there is demand for these units.  I know there is a strong demand for senior housing and market rate rentals but do not know anything about luxury rental housing.  The marketing materials appear to be aimed at people in their 20’s and 30’s.  

Part of the point of the development was to put jobs and housing together. Victoria Park is right next door to Crosby Lake Park which is an industrial park that has 6 businesses in it and either has 295 jobs or 526 jobs depending upon which number is right on the Port Authorities web site. 

Will it work out this time?  Will the apartments succeed?  If they do it will be good for the community. 

Do you live in a NORC?

neighborhood
neighborhood

 The first time I heard the term “NORC” was a couple of years ago at the West 7th Community Center.  I had to stop the meeting and ask for a definition.  NORC is an acronym for Naturally Occurring Retirement Community. 

NORCs are very real estate related and they are not planned communities. Rather, they evolve as people:

  • Age in place. Many communities house residents who raised families there decades ago and never left. They strongly wish to continue living in their homes of long standing.

  • Move into the community. A pattern of in-migration often brings seniors into age-integrated communities, typically in urban centers, where the seniors have access to amenities, culture, and other activities.

  • Move out of the community. Out-migration, typically reflecting the departure of younger residents from rural areas, leaves sizable populations of older residents behind.

The challenges going forward are to provide services for seniors in these communities and some seniors who plan to age in place are not currently in senior friendly homes.  I see it as I deliver meals on wheels.  The elderly woman who can no longer do her own laundry because she can not manage the basement stairs.  Some 0f the homes are too large and cost too much to heat.   

Most younger home buyers do not think about aging and they never asume that the first home they will buy will be the last but it works out that way fairly often.   I have many neighbors who are in their 70’s and 80’s who have lived in my neighborhood for fifty years and have raised their children here. Heck some of those children purchased homes in the same area and live close by.

If you are a younger senior citizen and by that I mean someone under 70 years old there are volunteer opportunities available for you.  your church or community center needs your help with the programs like Meals on Wheels that serve the oldest people in our communities. 

The hole at 5th and Wall

Last November I wrote about the hole in the ground as 5th and Wall Street (yes that is right St. Paul has a Wall street) in downtown St. Paul.  The hole was the begining of what was supposed to to the Farmers Market Lofts.  They were to be built and ready for occuapncy in 2007 or 2008 but we all know what happened.  The housing market crashed and there just wasn’t a market for the condos.   Now a building is being built on the site and it will house 48 or so market rate apartments.  The city of St. Paul is the developer and it would have cost the city money to fill in the hole which may have been a less expensive option but I want to be optimistic about housing and downtown.

I took this photo last November.

the hole at 5th & Wall
the hole at 5th & Wall

I took this photo on July 24, 2011

5th and Wall
Farmers Market Flats - 5th and Wall

It is hard to even imagine and empty hole and it wouldn’t be a bad place to live.  One block from light rail, across the street from the farmer’s market and I believe there will be an indoor market inside the building.  Mears park is only a block away.

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