FORMER  SEARS  BUILDING
                                                                         Minneapolis, MN
                                                                 Revolving Loan Fund Grant
                             Reviving Local Neighborhoods Through
                              "Community, Unity,  and Opportunity"
      ADDRESS:            Lake Street and Chicago Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55407
      PROPERTY SIZE:       10.8 acre
      BUILDING SIZE:       1.2 million square feet
      FORMER USE:         Former Sears store and catalog center
      CURRENT USE:        Residential, commercial, office space, a hotel, new transit
                         facility, Midtown Global Market
     EPA GRANT RECIPIENT:
     Hennepin County provided a
     $250,000 Brownfields
     Revolving Loan Fund loan to
     Ryan Companies U.S., Inc. to
     assist with cleanup costs.
PROJECT PARTNERS:
Sherman Associates, Inc.; Project for Pride in Living; Ryan/
Wischermann Partners; Neighborhood Development Center;
Collaborative Design Group; Elness Swenson Graham;
UrbanWorks Architecture, LLC; Close Landscape Architecture;
Shea Architects; Perkins & Will; The Green  Institute; Welsh
Companies; Hess Roise; McGrann Shea
For additional data and geographic information for this and
other Brownfields Grants, please visit EPA's:
Envirofacts - www.epagov/envin3/html/bms/bms_query.html
Enviromapper - www.epa.gov/enviro/bf
    PROJECT BACKGROUND:
    Built in the late 1920s, the former Sears mail-order warehouse and retail center expanded over the years ultimately comprising
    1.2 million square feet. In the late 1980s, Sears Roebuck & Co began to sell off all of its mail-order centers in a wave of
    restructuring and in 1994,  Sears closed and abandoned its Minneapolis location. The property remained vacant until the City of
    Minneapolis acquired the property in 2001 after previous failed attempts by private owners to convert the site. Contamination
    discovered at the property included asbestos found in the roofing materials, floor tile and mastic, insulation, gaskets, boiler and
    thermal system insulation,  plaster, window glazing, fire doors, baseboards, adhesives, and spray-on fireproofing; lead-based paint
    throughout the building including on the windowsills and floors; mold; and empty underground storage tanks.
     The completed Midtown Exchange.
                                  KEY ACCOMPLISHMENTS:

                                      Designated historic in August 2005 and received nearly $5 million in Historic Preservation
                                      Tax Credits.

                                      Dedicated to furthering the economic development of local neighborhoods and providing
                                      business development opportunities to local ethnic groups.

                                      Total redevelopment project valued at $190 million with more than 2,000 leveraged jobs
                                      anticipated to be located onsite.

                                      Leveraged more than $17.5 million in public, private and federal funds, including $3.5
                                      million in New Market Tax Credits.
    OUTCOME:

    After more than 12 years of efforts by neighborhood groups, local government and private-sector leaders, the former Sears
    building has been transformed into the Midtown Exchange, a mixed-use historic landmark. Cleanup activities funded by the loan
    were conducted in 2004 and included asbestos and lead-based paint removal. The building, which opened on June 3, 2006, is
    home to several tenants including the new corporate headquarters for Allina Hospitals and Clinics, a Hennepin County service
    center,  and a hotel. Almost half of the former Sears building has been redesigned into residential space, which includes 219 units
    of affordable and market-rate rental housing and 88 for-sale historic lofts and condominiums. In an effort to promote the ethnic
    diversity and community and economic development in the local neighborhood, nonprofit organizations worked together to
    develop the 72,000-square-foot Midtown Global Market located on the first floor of the Midtown  Exchange. As the largest and
    the only internationally-themed public market in Minnesota, the Midtown Global Market offers fresh foods, restaurants and arts
    and craft items from around the world.
    FOR MORE INFORMATION:  Visit the EPA Brownfields Web site at http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/ or call EPA Region 5 at (312) 353-2000

-------