Talk about your second takes. Banana Blossom reopened. I know, that’s old news, it happened months ago, but it’s
great news to me because I still haven’t
dropped in yet, and I am so excited to try this place. I thought I had missed my chance. They were open for a couple years with
me driving by at least five times a week and thinking I really wanna
try the food there. Then it was hit by a tornado. Not just grazed, either, but really slammed into like a hockey puck to the larynx. It was over. I lost my chance.
And chances don’t come along everyday on the north side. When I moved into this neighborhood
seven years ago there was a fantastic Caribbean joint a block from my
house. They had the best food, a
spectacular happy hour, and plans for a delightful & sunny patio. They got a glowing review from Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl back when she
was with the City Pages. Even with
all of this going for them they took on too much debt and closed within the
year. I’ve read the statistics -
60% of restaurants fail in the first three years, and by five years the failure
rate jumps to 75%. I’ve worked in
the industry for over a decade (I even waited on Dara once, when I briefly
worked at Tryg’s), and I knew how the cards were stacked. I knew I had completely missed my
window of opportunity to try Banana Blossom’s fare, and that they were not coming back.
Yet somehow they did come back after the tornado! Last fall the new glass went into their
large front windows, and now they’ve been reopened for some time, and their
food looks spectacular in photos!
I shall not continue to squander this blessing. I shall support these ridiculously
lucky NoMi entrepreneurs, and go there this week, I promise.
The end of May was the anniversary of that North Minneapolis
tornado. MPR made a huge deal
about it. I was on the bus on my
way to work the next week, and noticed they had taken another house on the
block on the northwest corner of Broadway & Penn Aves. Now there is the old fast food place
that’s boarded up, and one house still standing. That is all.
I honestly don’t know if anyone is living, or considering
living, in this house (it’s doubtful, but there’s no plywood over the doors or
windows, so it’s not unthinkable), but still it occurred to me how odd it would
be to wake up one morning and be the only house left on your block. What do you do, with no fences, no
hedges, no gates or delineations whatsoever, when you have a WHOLE CITY BLOCK
to yourself? On a major
crossroads? It’s not like this
house is down by the park or tucked away along the creek or anything – it is
smack in the geographical center of the poorest neighborhood in the city, and
it’s alone on an EMPTY block. The
building I wanted my start-up business in used to be there, but has since been
torn down (a result of the tornado).
St. Anne’s Catholic Community is right across 26th Ave, too, so it’s not like no one is
ever walking around here.
Take a moment to imagine yourself at home. Now imagine waking up one morning to
find you could peer across the street in every direction without
obstruction. Weird, right? One recent Sunday I found myself on the
50th floor where I work, and from 750 feet above street level you
can definitely see the stripe of no trees slash diagonally across North, from
Broadway & Penn to Lyndale & 42nd. I always found it difficult to locate my house from up
there, now it’s right next to the white stripe, half way up, a few blocks off
the left side.
No, we haven’t completely recovered. A year later there are still houses
with bright blue tarps on their roofs.
Many of these houses will probably never again support human life. Many have already been taken by the
bulldozers and the excavators, but of those that remain, few will stand in
another year. My favorite anchor
on Penn & Broadway is trying to recoup & rebuild across the street from
their now demolished building, on the empty block – I assume just because they
have half a century’s worth of ties to the neighborhood.
I was at ALDI the other day buying some groceries, and there
was a woman in front of me in line with the words “Project Bitch” tattooed just
above her waistline, in a cursive tramp stamp. I thought it was an apt metaphor for our shared
neighborhood. It IS a
project. It is a project that
we’ve been working on for years, and one that is consistently frustrated by
profiling, or stereotyping, or tornadoes.
It is something of a bitch, and there is still a narrative on the north
side of a person with their fists up, a person who resents the scrutiny. We take care of our own here; it’s just
what we do. We don’t need local TV
news to pat us on the back for it.
So now everybody’s impressed with how many things have
returned to normal on the north side.
Really? It’s been A
YEAR. Many homes weathered the
winter snows (thankfully sparse this year, but still…) WITHOUT ROOFS INTACT. That is not normal. Nor, in any other neighborhood, would
you dream of saying, “wow, they’ve come so far” if that were the case for any fraction of the housing stock. A year later they are still bulldozing
tornado homes. That’s how many were affected. And the sad thing is most of them had only minor
damage. They just didn’t have any
tenants or non-bank related interested parties to fix the minor damage, so
exposed to the elements for a year it has become major damage. If you want to know how far we’ve come
in a year, come park at Penn & Broadway and get out of your car. Take a moment to turn 360 degrees and
really take in the cityscape.
You’ll wonder how many DAYS it’s been since the storm.
So feel
free to congratulate us on the progress we’ve made, but don’t pretend there
aren’t still empty lots full of crabgrass that no one wants to own. We live in a vacuum that can only be
filled by investment. We need
people to want to live where we live in order to recover, and right now on the
north side of Minneapolis that prospect seems like something of a pipe
dream. All I can say is how much I
love my neighborhood, and how much you’d love it, if only we could get some
commerce up in here, and if only we could get some positive press. I’m still waiting to see a billboard
that says, “North Side: Come weather the storm with us, and rebuild something
today.”
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