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
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Becky Fillinger
Small Business Reporter
Producer / Milling About
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Michael Rainville Jr.
History Columnist
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Doug Verdier
River Matters

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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.

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

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MEET MINNEAPOLIS

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

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MSP FILM SOCIETY

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

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Covering life, work, and play in the Historic Mill District and Downtown Minneapolis Riverfront neighborhoods. Have an opinion, local news or events to share?  Contact us.

Tuesday
Aug092016

Mark Your Calendar for the Aug 27 Guthrie Open House!

Time: 11:00am - 3:00pm

Location:  Guthrie Theater, 818 Second Street South

ALL ARE WELCOME AT THIS FREE, FAMILY-FRIENDLY EVENT! 

Come on over for a day jam-packed with exploration, discovery and play. No reservations required. Here's what's on tap:

  • Take a peek backstage and into our workshops on a self-guided tour.
  • Curl up in our storytelling corner to hear a tale told by a Guthrie artist.
  • Let your imagination run wild at our mask-making station.
  • Tap into your talent in a mini-class for teens and adults.
  • Be wowed by theatrical magic on our signature thrust stage.
  • Snap a selfie using real Guthrie costume pieces and props.

With the Mill City Farmers Market open until 1 p.m., consider making a day of it and grabbing a bite to eat while you visit. For more information, call the Box Office at 612-377-2224.

Tuesday
Aug092016

City of Minneapolis and Minneapolis Park and Rec Board Seeking Developer for Upper Harbor Terminal Phase 1 Redevelopment

Via an August 8 Press Release from the City of Minneapolis, CPED: 

Monday, August 08, 2016 (Minneapolis, MN) - The City of Minneapolis (City) and Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board (MPRB) are seeking a qualified and creative real estate developer to be a part of the rebirth of the Upper Harbor Terminal (UHT) site.  UHT is a 48-acre, former multi-modal shipping terminal property located on the west bank of the river between 33rd Avenue N. and about 40th Avenue North in Minneapolis, MN just a few miles from the city’s thriving downtown. 

“The end of barging at the Upper Harbor Terminal in 2013 created new momentum for the redevelopment of this hidden jewel in our city,” said Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges. “The City of Minneapolis is eager to work alongside the Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board in selecting a developer that, with imagination and creativity, will work with us to transform this site into the world-class amenity that North Minneapolis needs and deserves.”

"The Upper Harbor has the potential to transform North Minneapolis and its relationship to the river,” said Council President Barbara Johnson. “I have confidence that we will see proposals that will offer entertainment, recreation, housing and economic development opportunities for this unique site."

UHT is the largest City-owned redevelopment site in Minneapolis. The property includes almost a mile of riverfront along the mighty Mississippi River, offers excellent freeway access, and does not appear to present significant environmental challenges.

“For decades the City of Minneapolis and MPRB have sought to redefine the relationship between Minneapolis and the Mississippi River,” said MPRB Superintendent Jayne Miller. “The Upper Harbor Terminal site represents an incredible opportunity to create a new, vibrant space on this key piece of riverfront land, and we’re excited to see the process move forward to create a great destination in North Minneapolis.”

Redevelopment of the site is a high priority for the City and MPRB because of its potential to address some of the long-standing disparities evidenced in the quadrant of the City where it is located. The project will include creating significant park and destination amenities to put the Northside of Minneapolis on par with other areas of the city. Work along the upper river follows upon the highly successful redevelopment of the central riverfront near downtown Minneapolis, which has seen more than $2 billion in private investment in the last few decades.

The City and MPRB goal is to select a development team with whom the City and MPRB can create a coordinated plan for private and park development. The selected team will be offered the opportunity to enter into an exclusive rights agreement to collaboratively design a plan for, at minimum, the northern half of the site, with the eventual goal of the developer implementing the private development portions of that coordinated plan.

Interested developers must submit a summary of their qualifications and an initial development program. The request for qualifications and accompanying information about the site and redevelopment goals may be found at the City’s and MPRB’s newly-launched shared web site at www.upperharbormpls.com. The RFQ may be downloaded here. 

The deadline for submission is Wednesday, October 14, at 4:00 pm (CDT).  A mandatory pre-submission meeting and tour is scheduled for Wednesday, August 31, at 9:30 am.

Monday
Aug082016

Trader Joe's Gets Closer, Thresher Square Plans Unvelied

UPDATED AUGUST 8, 2016: We just learned that groudbreaking is set for August 24. The project is located at Washington & Chicago Ave in the Downtown East neighborhood of Minneapolis.

MORE COVERAGE

Trader Joe's Coming to Downtown Minneapolis

Report: Trader Joe’s Coming To Downtown Minneapolis

Trader Joe's is a go for downtown Minneapolis location

Trader Joe's confirms downtown Minneapolis store plan

Thresher Square Plans

UPDATED FEBRUARY 5, 2015 The Thresher Square Project, which will include a Trader Joe's, is set to go before the Planning Committee of the Whole next week.

Download the Staff Report here...

Slideshow of artist renderings below:

Monday
Aug082016

A Man for All Seasons, especially Winter: A Conversation with Minnesota Novelist Peter Geye

Interview and Photos by Susan Schaefer

Author Peter Geye upstairs at the Loft Literary Center      

Outside the skies are frothed licorice and ice as mid-morning menaces like midnight. There’s powerful weather brewing.

A perfect time to hold a wide-ranging conversation with my teacher, mentor and friend, author Peter Geye [say ‘guy’], who elevates weather to character status in his latest novel, Wintering, published by New York powerhouse Alfred A. Knopf.

While the summer storm rages we hole up in the Loft Literary Center’s Open Book space, sipping java and reminiscing about our 12-week Loft Master Mondays fiction writing course in the place we first met, then nudging our conversation to what sets the Twin Cities area apart as a world-class writer’s mecca, to the release of his current book, his busy book promotion schedule, and the rigors of being a stay-at-home dad and professional novelist.

Wintering, review copy

His new novel, Wintering, released in early June, is a holy whisper. Perfect summer (or anytime) reading set in the achingly majestic borderlands of Northern Minnesota, Geye's writing is a paean to the complexity and ultimate triumph of the human spirit that is often as much at odds with itself as it is against the forces of nature. Delving deeply into the human psyche, this book mines universal themes in a unique tale of love, loss and revenge traversing decades and points of view, set in a landscape of ancient and menacing wilderness.

Calling Wintering a ‘sister book’ to his award-winning previous two novels, Safe from the Sea and The Lighthouse Road, brightens Geye’s mood. “I like that term,” he approves. (His previous works were not published under the Knopf imprint so the prestigious New York publishing house prefers not to consider ‘the set’ a trilogy.)

Geye mulls the question about why Minnesota lends itself to such a robust literary tradition - why we produce so many outstanding writers.

“There is so much support here,” he motions to our surroundings. “Take the Loft, for instance. There isn’t any institution like this anywhere else in the country. There are lesser versions, but nothing like this in terms of scope and support.”

“And there are the grants. There’s the McKnight Artist Fellowships administered by the Loft.  A Minnesota writer can apply for and win a $25,000 grant. Then, there’s the Minnesota’s Legacy Fund, which is unique. Established as a result of building the Twins’ (baseball team) Stadium, it offers exceptional funding for the arts in Minnesota, and I’ve benefited greatly from these.”

Geye continues, “Minnesota is filled with world class amenities from wild places and water to an astounding array of arts and cultural organizations. When you have this as an artist, you stay,” he emphasizes.

“People go to places like California for the weather. They are here for one hundred plus colleges and universities, a fantastic metropolitan area, theater, culture and so on. And so we end up with an unbelievably rich community of writers,” he concludes.

Speaking of wild places, what about his relationship with the Boundary Waters and North Shore areas that he writes about with such passion, knowledge and authority? 

“I’m a professional visitor,” he laughs. “I didn’t grow up with the cabin and a Northwood’s lifestyle, rather I discovered this area of the world through occasional canoe trips with my dad.”

Assuredly, he has staked that region as his fictional epicenter. Wintering takes the reader through each blade and grove, each cascade and ravine, until we’re literally hovering above, paddling along, or hiking through this mysterious and threatening terrain.

What entrances the reader is the luxury of Winterings every line. Geye’s sentences are carved like fine wooden artifacts, meticulously sanded and polished until each is an object worthy of a spotlight on a shelf.

His Knopf editor, Gary Fisketjon, who has redlined the likes of Donna Tartt, Annie Dillard, Raymond Carver, Tobias Wolff and Jay McInerney, has waxed lyrical about how Geye builds his work “line by line,” and such writing is ecstasy for serious readers. Charlie’s goal was to pillage the wilderness and get rich from the wreckage. This sparse sentence packs Wintering’s villain, Charlie Aas’ lifetime of malfeasance. The book is a cavalcade of such images.

I am typically not a reader of wilderness books or thrillers, nor particularly a fan of Midwestern history. Hailing from the East Coast, I gravitate towards works that blow grit in my eye or existential angst in my chest. But beginning with Geye’s Far from the Sea, I became a convert, opening to tortured frozen landscapes replete with themes of revenge and nature’s conquest. I’ve learned that the crust of ice on melted snow often yields to a deep and soft interior.

Peter Geye leans into Open Book’s iconic staircase 

Just as Geye’s exterior, now all scruffily bearded and slightly unkempt, masks a highly approachable, warm and gracious inner reservoir. Editors, students and fellow writers alike testify to his generosity of spirit, and my personal experience echoes the chorus.

Many might not take Geye for the (soon-to-be-single) primary caregiver father, but he is and will continue to be after his upcoming, amicable divorce. His daily school year routine rotates around his three young ones and he basks in this role of ushering them safely off to school, feeding and getting through homework, story and bedtime.

“I have written literally thousands of words with one or two kids between my legs,” he grins.

Regarding the tough tangle between full-time fatherhood and creating literature, Geye sees writing as his “chance to have life outside my family.”

“When you spend 15 hours a day with kids, no matter how much you love them,” writing books, inventing characters, and having these characters then invent you, is a monumental release.

Geye admits that the regular transition from inhabiting his fictional world back to his real one isn’t always easy. Like an actual family, he experiences a true sense of grief once his books are complete and his characters, his creations, no longer accompany his days and nights. “It’s a resounding sense of loss” as he returns to his real world.

Geye inscribes review copy

Writing in longhand, Geye acknowledges that his writing process doesn’t flow. It’s hard work and he embraces it. He’s a yeoman. Part of his process includes taking those written sheets around with him, reading and rereading, later word processing the longhand, (typically the same night), crafting, editing and re-crafting.

This intense labor shows. As Knopf’s Fisketjon attests – Geye’s work evolves “line by line” with the rare result of producing a literary tour de force “that knocked him sideways” when he first read it.

The character of Berit is Wintering’s touchstone, a rock really, one who may acutely strike women readers by her usual and compelling nature. How did a guy like him channel this iconic female character who is charged with guiding the reader through the unfolding layers of far past, past and present?

“I knew I wanted a narrator who could help navigate the reader through more than one story. It takes more than one story to tell our lives. I tried a few points of view and then wrote 50 pages. It was Berit who I ended up wanting in this role.” He says he became reliant on her in a way he’s “never experienced from a character before. She became my companion. I felt camaraderie. She ended up telling me the story.”

Geye’s character Berit became his companion – his fictional comrade

And so, Geye has unlocked the major feat of great fictional writing, which is when the characters share their story from their point of view with the writer. It is then that a writer surrenders to his/her characters, being freed to create the all-encompassing fictional world – a world where none of life’s daily problems or passions interferes with the reading experience. It is a triumph few achieve.

In this time of dramatic distraction that skill in this book is worth a trip to, or click on, the bookstore, a quiet spot, and a reading journey out of time and mind. Wintering delivers this magic with the punch of summer storm.

Please note: Geye will be teaching the Loft’s Master Mondays course again this fall, as well as an unprecedented one-year novel writing course beginning in January. Check the Loft’s website for more information.

Susan Schaefer can be reached at susan@millcitymedia.org. 

Sunday
Aug072016

Scenes from the August 6 Mill City Farmers Market

The Mill City Farmers Market celebrated National Farmers Market Week (August 7-13) at the August 6 Market.  Chipotle Mexican Grill sponsored the distribution of free five dollar shopping vouchers to the first 1,000 visitors. The vouchers were eligible for all take-home grocery items, as part of the Mil City Farmers Market and Chipotle’s mission to provide “farm fresh food for all.” 

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6 community booths included Wellness Minneapolis and Ingredient Magazine/Butternut Magazine. Look for separate articles on these organizations later this week on our Farmers Market blog.

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

It is perfectly acceptable to eat raw sweet corn - especially when it's freshly picked and sold by Nistler's. :)

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

You say you have a hankerin' for melon? Welcome to the Mother Lode!

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

A visit from Council Member Jacob Frey.

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

This dangling head of cauliflower reminded me of an old 50's sci-fi movie where you can see the wire connected to the toy UFO: 

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

Probably even more so than the kids, I love listening to stories read by the animated Guthrie Theater actor, H. Adams. :) 

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

This adorable little girl with a bouquet of dill stopped by the Info booth with her mother.

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

Milly the goat!

August 6, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

Sunday
Aug072016

In the News - News from Downtown & the Riverfront Neighborhoods

Counterpoint: Yes, traffic will get worse, if we prioritize road projects this way
The County Board recently voted 5-2 (with Commissioner Mike Opat joining me in voting “no”) to proceed with the reconstruction of a portion of Washington Avenue at the north end of downtown. Traffic congestion on Washington near the intersection with Interstate 35W is particularly problematic — sometimes backing up traffic considerably.

There's a free building available in Minneapolis, but you have to take it somewhere else
The building sits square in the middle of where Alatus, a Twin Cities-based developer, wants to build a 40-story condo tower at 200 Central Av. SE. Though it was once the St. Anthony Commercial Club, the 1929 building is better known for housing a Washburn-McReavy funeral home.

When I Work will move from St. Paul to Mpls. North Loop this fall
The new digs in the North Loop will look out over the bright lights of Target Field. A former Ford Model T assembly plant, the 10-story brick Ford Center was built in 1913 and renovated in 2011. Its anchor tenants are HGA Architects and Engineers and the creative agency Olson.

Sunday
Aug072016

2016 National Night Out (NNO) - The Mill District is a Great Place to Call Home

Thanks to a group of dedicated volunteers led by Cynthia Kriha, Mill District residents enjoyed another successful National Night Out (NNO) party on August 2nd. Per Cynthia, the estimated attendance for 2016 was 500.

Mill District National Night Out 2016

New this year: food trucks! Chef Shack and Peeps Hot Box offered menus with a little something for everyone. I think it was brilliant on the part of the planning committee to discontinue putting on a huge spread of food while attempting to cater to possible allergies and special needs. In addition to the tremendous amount of time it took to order, coordinate, transport, set up, etc., in the end there was quite a bit of waste. 

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Mill District National Night Out 2016

A cool treat on a steamy night - Izzy Pops, compliments of Betsy Lucas.

Mill District National Night Out 2016

$630 was raised for the Dollar$ for Diaper$ drive, which goes to help People Serving People keep stocked with diapers for their littlest guests.  Thank you to bartenders Ramji Kamakoti and Doug Cousins for encouraging people to donate!

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Mill District National Night Out 2016

The thoroughly enjoyable Rich Lewis Band returned for a second year, this time with a female vocalist.

Also returning for the second time was the SPARKit mobile play area, sponsored by Cynthia Froid Group. That trailer is loaded with all kinds of games and activities to keep kids occupied and interacting with each other.

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Thank you to Council Member Jacob Frey and members of law enforcement for being part of the event.

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Mill District National Night Out 2016

All partied out.  :D

Mill District National Night Out 2016

Sunday
Aug072016

Crime Alert: Robbery of Person

MPD ACTION ALERT - Case No. 16-278406

=================================================

CASE SUMMARY:

Incident Location: 10 AV S   3 ST S

Date and Time:  8/1/2016 2:35:00 AM - 8/1/2016 2:37:00 AM

Primary Offenses:  Robbery Of Person

Public Information: On above date and time Officers were flagged down by a male who had just been robbed by two black males while walking on the Hiawatha bike path.  The victim refused medical treatment by HCMC paramedics.  The victim was given a blue card and transported ho ...

Arrested Parties, if any (name - age / Address AptNo City, State Zip):

NOTE: Any persons arrested in this incident were not necessarily charged with the listed offenses. Use the link provided below for a more complete explanation of the format of these alerts if anything is unclear.

=================================================

NOTE: Asterisks (**) indicate that a street address has been masked, and the incident took place on the “100 block” ,e.g., 0041** Stevens AV S took place on the 4100 block of Stevens Av S. We do not include the full address of incident locations in order to preserve the privacy of victims.

Saturday
Aug062016

A Summer Cocktail Party, Minnesota-Style: Surdyk’s and Friends!

Story and photos by Julie Craven

If you're known by the company you keep, then Surdyk’s is in very good company. Surdyk's hosted a summer cocktail party to show off their catering capabilities, and to make sure the party was complete, they brought along their friends from Tattersall Distilling and Lakes & Legends Brewing Company.

Now, Surdyk's to me had always meant a trip to the Twin Cities from Austin, Minn. for the wine sale, and more recently, my go to place for wine and cheese for an impromptu happy hour. After Doug and I had been in the Mill District for awhile, we also came to know them as generous, community-minded neighbors in the Northeast.

Surdyk's is the contract caterer for all events at Northrop Auditorium on the University of Minnesota campus. Emily Dunne heads up Surdyk’s catering in this beautiful and historic location.

“We started with cheese trays," Emily explained. "We were a cheese shop so it made sense. The catering extended into other platters - local veggies, imported and local meats and sausage.”  Sandwich platters and box lunches have been their catering mainstays for the past several years, but the turning point was the contract with Northrop in April of 2014. “We knew we could execute it. We run the cafe and hundreds of large and small events during the school year.” The newly renovated auditorium on the U campus has become Surdyk's second home base. “We learned a lot about what we could do here. We went from dropping off a cheese tray, to breakfast for 1000.” What was the scariest event? “The first commencement for 2700. When the doors opened and everyone came out of the auditorium, we all took a deep breath!” Emily said.

A hands-on, family-owned business, now in its fourth generation, Surdyk's was the 11th liquor license granted by the city of Minneapolis when Prohibition ended. The grocery store-turned-liquor store evolved, and now there's a location at MSP Airport and dedicated beer and sake buying, in addition to their signature wine and cheese offerings.

So Emily, what's the trend for summertime entertaining? “Weird vegetables!" she exclaimed. "More crudités, people are eating light and they're eating their veggies! It's fun to see trays full of colorful, healthy vegetables.”

Dan Oskey from Tattersall Distilling (pictured below in plaid) was on hand to help demystify craft cocktails for a crowd. “We're letting folks know that making craft cocktails is simple because you can batch them and we'll show you how,” Dan explained. Salty Dog and Southside cocktails were on the menu and the recipes were available as well. “They will be consistent, but you can also be creative,” he added.

What's new at Tattersall? “We're distilling rum, 100% molasses rum, as we speak,” Dan shared. Known for their gin and vodka, Tattersall will have some new offerings out this fall, a bourbon, liqueurs and an apple brandy. “The holiday markets will be back this year," Dan said. "They're insane, but in a good way! The markets and Art-A-Whirl - they are our busiest days of the year.”

If it seems like Lakes & Legends Brewing Company has already been at all your summer parties this year, that's no surprise. They are now at over 45 area retail outlets. Partner events such as the Vegetarian Dinner at The Strip Club Meat & Fish restaurant, scheduled for August 16th, are also making their summer fly. Derrick Taylor with Lakes & Legends pointed out that their Belgian and Farmhouse Ale story was truly the “white space in the market” and they are having a blast discovering all the ways their beers complement the local food scene.

To complete the experience, Bridget Reddan from Northrop was there and was generous with her time and tips about their 2016-2017 season. Asking someone like Bridget which upcoming performance is her pick really isn't a fair question. Yes, she talked about each of the dance and theatre performances on the schedule, but with a food and entertainment experience like this, why not attend them all?!

Julie Craven can be reached at julie@millcitymedia.org.

Saturday
Aug062016

Get Your 2016 Greening Awards Nomination Submitted by August 8

Minneapolis Downtown Improvement District is accepting nominations  for the 2016 Greening & Public Realm Awards for green spaces the public feels are the best in the downtown area.

You have until Monday, August 8, to email them at info@minneapolisdid.com, leave a comment on their Facebook page, Tweet or comment on Instagram with your nominations.  They'll announce finalists and begin their annual public vote in mid-August. Click Here for more info on the 2016 Greening Awards Nominations.

Each 2015 winner received a yard sign showcasing they won the public vote in their respective category, and each will receive a commemorative award from Wood from the Hood. CLICK HERE to learn more about the 2015 winners, which includes seven first-time recipients chosen by a record-number of online voters. The DID thanks you for your participation and helping them celebrate downtown greening.

Friday
Aug052016

Haunted Basement X Tickets go on Sale Today!

Haunted Basement X Tickets go on Sale Friday, August 5

Ten years ago, a volunteer explored the depths of The Soap Factory’s basement and emerged with a fiendishly simple idea: hand people a poorly functioning flashlight, send them downstairs into the darkness and commit every terrified visitor to one important rule: DON’T LET GO OF THE ROPE.

A decade later, this simple idea has transformed into an ever-evolving annual tradition. The Haunted Basement has grown into one of the most notorious Halloween attractions in the Midwest. In addition, it has become a breeding ground for demented new talent ranging from visual artists and set designers to actors, dancers and all-around Creeps.

As the project has grown, one core directive has remained exactly the same since day one: to scare the living daylights out of every miserable soul who descends the entrance steps. This year, in the tenth iteration of the Haunted Basement, the themes of the basement will focus on a twisted view of real-life horrors with the designers’ mangled interpretation of a day in the life of a typical tortured soul.

This year they will also be offering other unique ways to experience the Haunted Basement: “Blind Invocation” is a special solo experience with encounters with multiple exclusive environments specially crafted to guarantee in-depth, one-on-one encounters;”Fraidy Cat Tours” is a special lights on, no actors tour of the full Haunted Basement sets; and “Un-Happy Hour” is the ‘No Touch’ Haunted Basement experience (for those who want to participate in the fun, but like their personal space).

More information. 

Thursday
Aug042016

New Paddle Share Stations Bring Kayak Rental to the Minneapolis Riverfront!

A rendering of the new paddle share station in North Mississippi Regional ParkA rendering of the new paddle share station coming soon to North Mississippi Regional Park

Via an August 4 e-newsletter from the Minneapolis Park and Rec Board:

Pilot program will allow park users to rent kayaks and explore Mississippi

New agreements between the National Park Service’s (NPS) non-profit charitable partner Mississippi Park Connection (MPC), the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) and the Mississippi Watershed Management Organization (MWMO) created a pilot program that will bring “paddle share” stations to Minneapolis’ Upper Riverfront this summer.

The NPS and its partner, Mississippi Park Connection, hope to launch the pilot program in late August, pending all necessary permits and approvals.  Read more

About Paddle Share Stations

Paddle share stations are similar to a bike share stations like Nice Ride Minnesota, but there are some differences. Once the program launches, users go online to www.paddleshare.org (not available yet, targeted for late August) to reserve kayaks for a specific date and time, review safety precautions and a safety video, sign a waiver and pay for the reservation.

Once the reservation is paid, users will receive a code that unlocks a station on the selected date and time at either North Mississippi Regional Park (near Kroening Interpretive Center) or the MWMO Stormwater Park and Learning Center, enabling them to get all necessary equipment (kayak, paddle, life jacket). Check with the NPS for times staff and volunteers will be available onsite to help explain the paddle share program and share information about the river and the national park.

Users can paddle upriver or downriver, but the rental equipment must be returned to the return station at Boom Island Park (on the southern edge of the park next to the existing canoe racks) before the allotted time is up. All stations are aligned with Nice Ride Minnesota bike share stations so users are able to paddle downriver and then bike back to where they started. Check Nice Ride bike availability and transit schedules at www.rivertripplanner.org

Wednesday
Aug032016

Announcing the Temporary Closure of Restaurant Alma and the Opening of Café, Hotel and Restaurant Alma

Via an August 2 e-newsletter from Restaurant Alma:

ALMA “2.0”: Restaurant, Café and Hotel

In 2013, fourteen years after the opening Restaurant Alma, the wonderful opportunity came along to purchase our building, and together as a team we began the journey of expanding the Alma experience to include an all-day cafe and boutique hotel. We also planned some much needed renovations to the original restaurant space. The process has taken longer than we expected, presenting many challenges and great learning experiences along the way. Most importantly, our work with the Minneapolis City Council, Marcy-Holmes Neighborhood Association, and many supportive neighbors, ultimately resulted in changes to the city lodging ordinance: allowing the operation of small hotels in Minneapolis (for the first time in nearly 100 years), and breathing life into our new concept.

The Temporary Closing of Restaurant Alma

Alma “1.0“ will serve the last dishes from our Summer Menu on Friday, August 12th. Unavoidably, we must close for three months to connect the restaurant and cafe kitchens and to make significant mechanical and equipment upgrades. At the same time, the dining room will be undergoing renovations to improve the comfort of the guest experience, while also preserving the feel and layout of the original space. To reserve a table before August 12th please reserve via our website or call the restaurant after 2pm at 612-379-4909.
 
Perhaps the most important goal for us in the next seventeen years is to keep Alma very much the same. Since our first day of business we have believed in the saying, “a kitchen is only as good as the last meal it served,” knowing it applies equally to customer service. We believe our continued success is dependent on maintaining this humble—yet imperative—standard. One thing is for sure: the magic of excellent food and exceptional hospitality is never something we can turn into a simple recipe or set of instructions. We will continue our pursuit of excellence until the last plate is served at Alma 1.0, during our closure and preparations, and into the future with the arrival of Alma “2.0” this fall.

Our projected reopening date is the week of November 7th, 2016, landing almost seventeen years from our opening day in 1999. To share our progress and more about our expansion, we would like to invite you to read a weekly blog on our website, where we will chronicle construction progress, special events, design, menu development, hiring, and profiles of our dedicated team while we prepare for our first day as a restaurant, cafe and hotel.

Booking Hotel Alma

We are launching our online hotel-booking site to the public on Saturday, October 1st. To honor you, our longtime guests, we will be offering room reservations for mid-November stays, by invitation only. Expect another email from us in late September with a promotional code to book. 

Tuesday
Aug022016

Tonight - August 2: 2016 National Night Out in the Mill District!

Location: On the Chicago Avenue Mall (between Humboldt Lofts & the Guthrie)

National Night Out is an annual nationwide event that encourages residents to get out in the community, holding block parties and getting to know their neighbors as a way to encourage crime prevention. It's a great way to promote community-police partnerships and enjoy a Minnesota summer evening surrounded by friends and family. For more information, see the Minneapolis NNO mission statement.

Gather with your Mill District neighbors 6:00pm-9:00pm and enjoy:

Thank you to the hardworking group of volunteers led by Cynthia Kriha for consistently making the annual Mill District National Night Out (NNO) party a success! If you'd like to volunteer to help with clean up or the snack table, please contact Cynthia at 612-940-3827.

Last year's attendance was estimated at 525. Here are some scenes from that party:

Monday
Aug012016

Washington Avenue Reconstruction Project Open House, Aug 4 at Open Book

Via an e-newsletter from Hennepin County:

Project Construction Open House

You are invited to an open house for the Washington Avenue (County Road 152) reconstruction project.

Time and date: 4:30 - 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, August 4

Location: Open Book's Target Performance Hall at 1011 Washington Avenue S

There is no formal presentation. You can come at any time.

Project leaders will be at this informal event to provide you with an overview of the project, including information about the different stages of the project, details about the various improvements and overviews of the detours and traffic changes during construction.

About this project

Hennepin County, in coordination with the City of Minneapolis, is reconstructing Washington Avenue South (County Road 152) between Hennepin Avenue and Fifth Avenue South.

When complete, the project will:

•Add dedicated turn lanes at key intersections
•Provide more space for pedestrians and shorten crossing distances at intersections
•Provide one-way cycle tracks, or protected bike lanes

To learn more about the project, visit www.hennepin.us/washingtonavenue.

Project contact:
Stan Lim, project engineer
612-596-0292

Monday
Aug012016

Reward Offered in Gold Medal Park Vandalism

$500 for information leadng to arrest and conviction

Vandals struck in the wee hours of the morning on Friday, July 22 damaging the lights in front of the Gold Medal Park sign. The 2 white males caused over $3,000 in damages.

The campany charged with maintaining the park, Windsor Companies, is offering a reward of $500 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible. Contact Windosr Companies with questions.

Sunday
Jul312016

Minnesota’s Tom Fisher: Making the World Better by Design

Interview and Photos by Susan Schaefer

Tom Fisher, Director, University of Minnesota’s Metropolitan Design Center

What is essential is invisible to the eye, says the fox.
     - Saint-Exupéry, The Little Prince

We tend to think of design in terms of the visible world around us: the buildings we occupy and the products we use. But the ‘invisible’ systems that we depend on in our daily lives – the infrastructure buried beneath our feet or in our walls, the educational and health systems that we all experience as we age or become ill, and the economic and political systems that affect us in myriad ways over time – remain just as much designed as anything that we inhabit or use.
     - Thomas Fisher, Designing Our Way to a Better World, University of Minnesota Press

If it’s up to Tom Fisher, Director of the University of Minnesota’s Metropolitan Design Center, design professionals will help guide “the design of what we cannot see” in 21st century projects.
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Most known for designing visible objects like buildings, landscape, typeface or clothing, Fisher is out to prove that design professionals are well suited to helping solve invisible ones – large, complex problems, particularly in the areas of education, public infrastructure, public health, politics and economics, and he’s got a brand new book, Designing Our Way to a Better World, University of Minnesota Press, to help us see why.
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Fisher inscribes his latest book, Designing Our Way to a Better World

As we sit is his subterranean yet sun-filled offices in the iconic Rapson Hall on the University’s East Bank, Fisher glows like a schoolboy as he discusses his life, work, new book and recent projects. If anyone is capable of linking the design process to life’s processes, Fisher is uniquely qualified and Minnesota is lucky to have him. As the saying goes, “He could have chosen anywhere.”

As a young university architecture student in Cornell University, Cleveland-born Fisher had a remarkable summer encounter: In one of those ‘life changing’ moments he came face-to-face with the intellectual giant, Lewis Mumford, architectural critic for The New Yorker, noted for his study of cities and urban architecture amongst other scholarly pursuits. 

Young Fisher, in awe of his intellectual prowess, boldly asked: “How do I get to be like you?”

That query was met with Mr. Mumford’s serious and sagacious advice, “Go study how the mind works.” Thus began Fisher’s trajectory from architectural education to what can best be called “the study of big ideas” in an exceptional graduate program offered through Case Western Reserve.

Earning a Master’s Degree in Intellectual History can be an intriguing cocktail party conversation starter, or not. But Fisher’s passion for ideas and ideals is alarmingly pure, rendering him approachable on lofty, mind bending topics. And, his enthusiasm is disarming – tangy and cool as vodka and ginger over ice on a hot day. Lewis Mumford would be proud. Fisher wants to know, and doggedly pursues, “How we should live.”

I first met Fisher in 1995, shortly after he’d come on board as Dean of the University’s College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. As the Director of Communications for local architects, Cuningham Group, I was tasked to help introduce to our region the newly appointed head of urban planning, the late, great Victor Caliandro, highlighting his illustrious expertise as a riverfront designer.

In response, I created a public affairs program, The Minneapolis Riverfront: Vision and Implementation, to draw attention to him and the then-abandoned central Minneapolis Riverfront.

Rather than taking the customary marketing communications tactic, I suggested an innovative public affairs approach to establishing the firm as a leader. We convened multiple key players who had been long engaged about how best to develop the then dormant riverfront, our now vital riparian treasure.

Tom Fisher was first on my list of local stakeholders. He joined our effort and lent his considerable brainpower to the project that included local, national and international architects, to reimagine the riverfront. We have remained friends and colleagues ever since.

Not many ordinary Minnesotans understand the heft and impact of the University’s Metropolitan Design Center, soon to be renamed the Minnesota Design Center. Nor is the story of how the School of Architecture morphed into the College of Design much known outside the field. Yet, Fisher’s and the University’s leadership add essential gravitas to Minnesota’s role in this critical and cutting-edge field.

Q: Please talk about the evolution of the University’s College of Design, why you stayed on to shepherd the transition, and what it means to our region.

A: When the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, where I was the dean, merged with the Department of Design, Housing, and Apparel to become the College of Design in 2006, I stayed on as the dean because it represented where I thought the design community needed to go.

By having all of the design disciplines in one college, we have been able to develop new interdisciplinary programs, like product design or human factors. This new college has also positioned us well to participate in the growing interest in design thinking, which is the topic of my recent book. The redesign of the systems that are not working well – our educational system, our political system, our economy, our infrastructure, etc. – may be one of the most important tasks before us and it is something to which our Center and our College has to contribute.

Fisher demonstrates visualizing design

Q: Back when I convened the Minneapolis Riverfront: Vision and Implementation program, William Morrish was the Director of the Design Center for American Urban Landscape. Was that a precursor of the Metropolitan Design Center? How and when did the Metropolitan Design Center begin?

A: Yes, the Metropolitan Design Center, which is in the process of changing its name to the Minnesota Design Center to reflect its statewide mission, is the same entity that Bill Morrish and Catherine Brown led over 20 years ago as its first directors. We changed the name because the Design Center for American Urban Landscape seemed too long and too hard for many people to remember. I am the fourth director of the center.

Q: Who supports the Center and what benefit does it bring to our region?

A: The center is supported by a generous endowment by the Dayton Hudson (now Target) Foundation and we have had on-going support from the McKnight Foundation.

In terms of the Center’s importance, we are living in a period of unprecedented urbanization, with record numbers of people moving into cities, and a period in which we face profound economic, environmental, technological, and social changes. The Center provides a platform and a place where a diverse group of people can work on projects related to these issues, helping communities and organizations recognize and respond constructively to the opportunities that we face in Minnesota as well as nationally.

Q: My work as a public relations and public affairs professional puts me in almost daily contact with members of the ‘design community,’ from graphics to architecture to urban to product design and more. My respect for designers is immense and sincere, yet I perceive that their (modern) training and education, and view held by society, often locks these elegant problem solvers into insular boxes. They have been essentially handicapped or ‘siloed’ by internal and external points of view. Your latest book and your very ethos seem to push back hard on this insularity, advocating for ‘design thinking’ by designers as a 21st century opportunity to break out of these boxes. Please elaborate and explain specifically how the work you’re doing and education you’re providing at the Metropolitan Design Center can/will change this equation, allowing those bright designers a more impactful role in society.

A: The design community is undergoing a transition from strictly defining itself in terms of outcomes – architects produce buildings, industrial designers products, etc. – to more broadly defining itself in terms of the knowledge, processes and methods used to do such work, which has applications far beyond its traditional outcomes.

We do this in our work at the Center. For example, we are working with Allina Health to teach design thinking skills to the leadership of the CDC (Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, GA) so that that organization can respond more creatively and flexibly to global health challenges. We are also working with four countries (Hennepin, Ramsey, Anoka, and Dakota) to reimagine the adult foster care housing system to give residents greater choice.

In all of these cases, we co-create with the groups we work with and build their capacity to do this work without us. I would love to see design thinking skills taught as part of every student’s education, since we all have the capacity to be more creative than we are often allowed to be.

Q: What are the pros and cons about working in a university environment?

A: The pros of working here are the great students we have to work with and the faculty and practitioners who bring a lot of knowledge and passion to the work they do.  The cons are mainly on the HR side: our work requires a degree of flexibility and speed of work that doesn’t fit well with the HR policies and procedures of universities, geared to the hiring of long-term faculty and staff.

Q: Important to our readership is the Central Mississippi Riverfront. What do you see as working, what missing in the current overall Central Mississippi Riverfront development?

A: The planning for the central Mississippi has done a lot of good work, with some of the nation’s top landscape-architecture talent working on it, creating a public realm that will be accessible to and enjoyed by everyone. What’s missing is a mechanism to enable a diverse population to live near and next to these open spaces. While we know that affordable housing can greatly reduce other social costs, we lack the means to provide it and so we have extraordinary open spaces along the river that the less affluent have to travel far to see. 

Q: What else should our readers to know about yourself or your work?

A:  I have always wanted my work to speak for itself and not have it be about me. I am married, have two grown daughters, both of whom are married and living in the area, and have a grandson and a grand daughter on the way. And I follow the advice of the Stoics: focusing on what I can control and where I can make a contribution, without spending any time on what I can’t control or can’t contribute.

Fisher with a co-creator at Towerside: MSP Innovation District’s ribbon cutting

Speaking of making a contribution, as we conclude our interview, Fisher enjoins me to hop the light rail to attend the ribbon cutting of another precedent-setting project on which he’s been involved, Towerside. Called an MSP Innovation District, Towerside is 370 acres extending from the University’s campus in Minneapolis east into St. Paul, the only duly designated innovation district in the Twin Cities with the intent to mix entrepreneurs, residents, researchers, developers and businesses with a new, restorative, healthy and arts-inspired community. Truly, design thinking made visible.

Susan Schaefer can be reached at susan@millcitymedia.org.

Sunday
Jul312016

NEMAA is seeking an inspired and driven Executive Director!

NEMAA is seeking an executive director who will oversee the production of its promotional events, entrepreneurial development programs, and operational activities, while strategically focusing on building community partnerships and fundraising to ensure the fiscal sustainability and growth of the organization.

The Northeast Minneapolis Arts Association (NEMAA) is a 501(c)3 nonprofit arts organization serving over 900 primarily artist members, as well as the Northeast (NE) Minneapolis community, the city, and the metropolitan region.  NEMAA fosters and supports a community where visual artists can work and showcase their art through connectivity with local businesses, political representatives, and the wider community in order to build a more vibrant, economically healthy and sustainable artistic milieu.

In service to its members, NEMAA produces three major showcasing events; Art-A-Whirl, Fall Fine Arts, and Wintertide.  The organization produces an Artist Directory and Guide and hosts several mediums in which to promote and inform its membership.  It also regularly conducts workshops, community planning efforts, and promotes tours and visits to the district.  In the main, NEMAA has created a series of traditions in the effort to draw attention to the work of its member artists, as well as the spaces of production that exist within NE Minneapolis.

USA Today ranked Northeast Minneapolis the #1 arts district in the country in 2015, a distinction built on the work of NEMAA and its artist and community members over the past two-plus decades. The Art-A-Whirl open studio event draws upwards of 30,000 people to NE during a weekend in May, and the Fall Fine Arts and Wintertide gallery events host 850 and 1,200 guests respectively, on opening night.  Arts activity is an acknowledged economic driver in NE, and the growth of the arts presence has raised interest in the neighborhoods of NE Minneapolis by businesses and residents.  Therefore, NEMAA seeks a strategic visionary to shepherd the artists, their spaces of production and exhibition, and NEMAA’s events within a changing landscape.

Summary of Work:

  • Work closely with the board of directors to envision and execute strategies in line with the organization’s mission and strategic plan
  • Provide vision, leadership and strategies in the development and execution of a fundraising plan
  • Provide vision, leadership and strategies in the fostering and development of new community partnerships and in the maintenance and growth of existing relationships
  • Provide leadership and management oversight to enhance the production of NEMAA’s arts focused promotional events
  • Provide direction to enhance and grow NEMAA’s entrepreneurial development workshops and toolkits
  • Streamline operations and drive technological efficiencies in NEMAA’s day-to-day operations, providing mentorship and support to NEMAA staff
  • Provide the board with a proposed annual budget and drive responsible fiscal management in partnership with the board to operate within the approved budget
  • Work to enhance the NEMAA brand and reputation, working with the marketing contractor to further align marketing and promotional opportunities, directory ad sales, and the membership drive with established revenue strategies
  • Work to ensure excellent member services in all aspects of NEMAA programs and operations

Minimum Qualifications:

  • Bachelor’s degree in business or nonprofit administration/management, urban studies/planning, arts and cultural leadership/administration, marketing, or related fields
  • Demonstrated ability to work with board/executive leadership
  • Demonstrated ability to innovatively form, foster and grow community partnerships/relationships
  • Demonstrated ability to energetically strategize revenue producing activity/fundraise
  • Demonstrated ability to write, garner and oversee management of grants
  • Demonstrated ability to lead and manage staff and contractors and provide guidance as a mentor
  • Demonstrated ability to fiscally manage revenues and oversee operations
  • Demonstrated ability to lead and manage innovative member service initiatives
  • Excellent written and verbal communication skills
  • Broad knowledge of arts entrepreneurial needs and constraints
  • Broad knowledge of creative industries and creative place making narratives

Desirable Qualifications:

  • MA/MBA or advanced degree equivalent
  • Knowledge of the region’s arts based economy and networks
  • Experience in advocacy roles
  • Experience in collaborator roles or with community work
  • Experience with media
  • Experience with event planning

To Apply:

Review of candidate materials will begin at the close of business on August 18, 2016.  All applications should include a letter of interest, resume, and three professional references.  Address all materials to NEMAA Hiring committee and send via email to applications@nemaa.org

Interested applicants are encouraged to explore NEMAA’s website at https://nemaa.org/.

Application materials must be complete and received by the application deadline in order to be considered. EEO.

Sunday
Jul312016

In the News - News from Downtown & the Riverfront Neighborhoods

TOP STORIES LAST WEEK

Could the Mississippi River actually begin in South Dakota?
Questioning whether the Mississippi begins in Lake Itasca may be blasphemy – or good geology.

Plan to reconnect Cedar-Riverside, downtown Mpls. hits roadblock over traffic concerns
A plan to stitch up the freeway gash that divides Cedar-Riverside from downtown Minneapolis by converting an old exit ramp into a pedestrian friendly crossing has been delayed amid a debate over cars.

6 reasons to like new Downtown East Commons park in Minneapolis
The largest open space in downtown Minneapolis shows that an urban park can be more than trees and grass.

Blarney to open pub near U.S. Bank Stadium
Dinkytown’s Blarney Pub & Grill is opening a second location near U.S. Bank Stadium in Downtown East.

Nimbus Theatre finds new home in Northeast
Independent theater company Nimbus Theatre has found a new home across Northeast Minneapolis after leaving its home on Central Avenue last year.

Q+A: Olga Viso discusses the Walker Art Center's plans for a more artfully integrated campus
The Walker’s plans to rebuild its Vineland Place entry and re-landscape the former site of the Guthrie Theater also coincide with a two-year refresh and infrastructure rebuild of the park-board-owned sculpture park.

RoehrSchmitt renovates factory to address need for office and retail space in Northeast
The old Miller Bag Building, plonked on the outskirts of Northeast Minneapolis’ commercial core, is pretty big. Actually, the hulking four-story structure and its three outbuildings are legitimately out of scale with their surroundings.

Family says Prince tribute concert will be Oct. 13 at Vikings stadium
Family members confirmed the date, but there was no word on who might perform.

Minneapolis, St. Paul lead suburbs in growth
Minneapolis City Council Member Jacob Frey said more people of all ages want to live in places with a “dense, dynamic atmosphere.”

Surdyks & Amazon Launche One-Hour Alcohol Delivery Service In Twin Cities
One-stop online retailer Amazon has partnered with Surdyk’s to offer speedy delivery of beer, wine and spirits to Twin Cities area customers.

Butcher Block opens expansion into Pacifier space
The Northeast Minneapolis Italian restaurant has added a bar and more seating thanks to an expansion into the into the former flagship space of the baby gift and clothing boutique. Pacifier relocated from the Hennepin Avenue space in January to open a larger location in the North Loop.

More TCF Bank building redevelopment details released
Franklin Street Properties shared more details about its redevelopment plans for the TCF Bank building that was at one time going to be the site of a 50-story tower in downtown Minneapolis.

U.K. will open new trade offices in Minneapolis, two other cities
The United Kingdom is the ninth-biggest buyer of Minnesota exports.

Sunday
Jul312016

Scenes from the July 30 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30 was Youth at the Market Day.  Farm2School and the Minneapolis Public Schools' Food Truck were on hand with information on bringing food direct from the farm to schools, samples and games. Look for a separate post on these organizations later this week on our Farmers Market blog

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

Shoppers were treated to a preview of Donald Giovanni in Cornlandia: A Picnic Operetta, which is touring in August and September.

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

Lobster mushrooms from Prairie Hollow Farm:

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market

Milly the goat!

July 30, 2016 Mill City Farmers Market