Apple Valley
officials are banking that the soon-to-be-launched bus rapid transit
line can jump-start development in Central Village, a partially
completed mixed-use project that stalled during the recession.
Last
year saw a significant step forward with the city’s approval of plans
for Parkside Village, a 332-unit upscale apartment complex that’s part
of the Central Village development area. It’s the biggest multi- family
project to be built in Apple Valley in more than 10 years. The developer
hopes to begin work on the project in August.
Planned
by the city in the early 2000s, Central Village is a 60-acre project
that already has townhouses, senior housing, affordable/workforce
apartments, a hotel, a small office building, shops and restaurants. The
economic downturn slowed progress of filling in vacant portions of the
project, with some parcels being taken back by lenders. About half of
the 60 acres is yet to be developed.
The city
now is eyeing six vacant, tax-forfeited properties west of the new
apartment development, in an area near 152nd between Galaxie and Garrett
avenues.
An office building — one with a large
employer as an anchor tenant — is high on the city’s priority list for
filling some of the empty space. Nordquist said the city would like to
see up to 100,000 square feet of office space, a total that likely would
require an anchor tenant taking about 50,000 square feet. The addition
of bus rapid transit could help Apple Valley attract this employer.
Apple
Valley’s reach for a large corporate presence fell short about a year
ago, when tech-support company Stream Global Services considered
relocating its headquarters from suburban Boston to Apple Valley but
later said it could not find adequate space and instead opted for Eagan.
The company has said its new headquarters would have 40 to 50
employees, with hundreds more workers in a neighboring call center.
Apple
Valley had planned to use an $866,000 grant from the Metropolitan
Council to help redevelop an older two-building office complex for
Stream Global. The city recently got Met Council approval to use the
funds instead to acquire three of the tax-forfeited parcels in Central
Village for the office building. The property is about one-half mile
from the Apple Valley Transit Station on Cedar Avenue that will be the
southernmost stop for the new bus rapid transit line.
The
city believes the location could be attractive for an office project,
because it’s bordered by a post office and the Grandstay Hotel &
Conference Center.
Mass transit is another key
ingredient. Initiated by the Dakota County Board almost 10 years ago,
the bus rapid transit line is envisioned as the county’s connection to
the metro area’s transit network.
Buses every 15
minutes will carry riders along Cedar from Apple Valley to the Mall of
America, connecting to light rail that runs to the airport and downtown Minneapolis.
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