Kim Eslinger
Editor
612-321-8040
kim@millcitymedia.org

Brianna Ojard
Associate Editor

David Tinjum
Publisher
612-321-8020
dave@millcitymedia.org

Claudia Kittock
Columnist / Non-Profits
Email Claudia...

Becky Fillinger
Small Business Reporter
Producer / Milling About
Email Becky...

Michael Rainville Jr.
History Columnist
Email Michael...

Doug Verdier
River Matters

Mill City Times is a not-for-profit community service. We do not sell advertising on this site.

Community Partners

Thanks to our community partners, whose support makes Mill City Times possible:

MILL CITY FARMERS MARKET

With over 100 local farmers, food makers and artists, MCFM strives to build a local, sustainable and organic food economy in a vibrant, educational marketplace.

Visit their website...

HENNEPIN HISTORY MUSEUM

Hennepin History Museum is your history, your museum. We preserve and share the diverse stories of Hennepin County, MN. Come visit!

Visit their website...

MEET MINNEAPOLIS

Maximizing the visitor experience of Minneapolis for the economic benefit of our community, making Minneapolis the destination of choice among travelers.

Visit their website...

MSP FILM SOCIETY

Promoting the art of film as a medium that fosters cross-cultural understanding, education, entertainment, and exploration.

Visit their website...

GREAT RIVER COALITION

Enhancing the Minneapolis riverfront environment—for people and pollinators.

Visit their website...

Cultural Cornerstones
Search Mill City
Event Archives
Event Archives
« August 12, 2017, Saturday - Mill City Farmers Market | Main | August 12, 2017, Saturday - Engineering the Falls: History Player William de la Barre Tour »
Saturday
Aug122017

August 12, 2017, Saturday - Minneapolis Warehouse District Walking Tour with Preserve Minneapolis

Time: 7:00pm – 8:30pm

Location:  Corner of Washington Avenue N and 3rd Avenue N

Minneapolis Warehouse District Walking Tour with Preserve Minneapolis

Guide: Rolf Anderson

The Minneapolis Warehouse Historic District is the state’s largest commercial district listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  Spread over a 30 block area, the district includes 140 buildings and structures.  The district is historically important as an area of early commercial growth during the development of the city of Minneapolis and as the city’s warehouse and wholesaling district that expanded during the late 19th and early 20th centuries when Minneapolis became a major distribution center in the upper Midwest.  Wholesalers were attracted to the area northwest of the downtown business district where land values were relatively low and railroad lines nearby.  The leading wholesale lines included groceries, fruits and produce, hardware, dry goods, glassware, and most importantly, agricultural implements.

The district is also architecturally significant for its remarkably intact concentration of commercial buildings designed by the city’s leading architects including Cass Gilbert, Long and Long, Harry Wild Jones, Kees and Colburn, and Hewitt and Brown.  Stylistically, the buildings represent every major style from the period including Italianate, Queen Anne, Richardsonian Romanesque, Renaissance Revival, and the Commercial Style.

The warehouse district has retained its sense of time and place with original bridges still in place, streets paved with bricks, and with trains passing through daily on the tracks beds around which the area first developed. The tour will discuss the overall history of the district, the history and architectural styles of individual buildings, and the architects who designed them.