Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The typical floors are 24,700 sq ft (2,290 m 2) for a total of 1,170,000 sq ft (109,000 m 2) of office space and 489,000 sq ft (45,400 m 2) in the retail mall. [5] The attached Minneapolis City Center consists of a retail mall, renovated in 2005, with five skyway connections, the Minneapolis Marriott at City Center, a 583-room full-service four ...
San Francisco-based Shorenstein Properties purchased Minneapolis City Center in 2012. [10] [11] In January 2015, Saks Fifth Avenue announced plans to open a clearance store at the Minneapolis City Center, relocating from their former 27,000-square-foot (2,500 m 2) location at the neighboring Gaviidae Common.
In 2006 the plant underwent a "$350 million project to produce a diesel fuel containing substantially less sulfur." [6]In 2012 the company proposed to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) a $400 million upgrade to help move the refinery "closer to its processing capacity of 320,000 barrels of crude per day and also reduce emissions of nitrogen oxide and sulfur dioxide".
Minneapolis 1983 170,520 square feet (16,000 m 2) [22] Ackerberg Design Shingle Creek Crossing (previously Brookdale Center) Brooklyn Center: 2012 652,000 square feet (61,000 m 2) [23] Gatlin Development Company Shoppes at Knollwood (previously Knollwood Mall) St. Louis Park: 1955 456,554 square feet (42,000 m 2) [24] Gateway Knollwood, LLC
RSM Plaza is a 320-foot (98 m) tall skyscraper in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Formerly known as McGladrey Plaza, it was completed in 1969 and has 20 floors. In October 2015, the building was renamed RSM Plaza after its largest tenant, McGladrey, changed its own name to RSM. It is the 30th-tallest building in the city and is located on Nicollet Mall.
The 7th Street Shinder's moved to a former Burger King at 8th and Hennepin, and the 6th Street Shinder's moved to the 900 block of Nicollet Mall. (By 2007, both locations had closed.) After a City-hosted party on Block E along Hennepin Avenue celebrating the impending demolition, crews began razing the structures on October 18, 1988.
The company specialized in gas main installations, putting in the original gas mains in Rhode Island. They eventually grew to offer pipe fitting and plumbing services. In 1869, Frederick Grinnell, a Massachusetts-born engineer, purchased a controlling interest in Providence Steam and Gas and became its president. Fire protection was a new ...
The mall's northern block, Gaviidae Common II, was designed by Chicago-based Lohan Associates and was completed in 1991, atop where Minneapolis' JCPenney department store formerly stood. [17] In contrast to Gaviidae Common I, the northern block features red-accented columns and railings and once housed the world's only "upward-flowing waterfall ...