My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
5. EDSR 09-11-2006
ElkRiver
>
City Government
>
Boards and Commissions
>
Economic Development Authority
>
EDA Packets
>
2003-2013
>
2006
>
09-11-2006
>
5. EDSR 09-11-2006
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
9/30/2011 11:16:25 AM
Creation date
9/30/2011 10:07:44 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Government
type
EDSR
date
9/11/2006
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
144
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
There are a number of reasons that development has been so active in the area, however. A major driver, <br />according to developers and business owners, is the existence of major roadways such as I-q4 and <br />Interstate 6q4, which provide the infrastructure necessary for large-scale developments. <br />"Because of I-q4 and the interchanges off that, the northwest quadrant will probably see a higher <br />proportion of growth than other sectors," said Collin Barr, vice president of development at Ryan Cos. <br />US Inc. in Minneapolis. "The southwest is trying to grow at the same pace, but it doesn't have something <br />like q4 in place yet. So, the northwest will be the quadrant that attracts the most commercial development <br />in the next few decades." <br />Another contributing factor to the rising prices is the rebounding industrial market, Little said. "It's <br />coming back, and that's driving up the land values. Although there's a big retail push, the industrial <br />market is turning out to be the most active right now." <br />Spurring development <br />As developers turn their attention to the northwest suburbs, city planners in the area have been quick to <br />respond. <br />In November, Elk River officials announced they would open about roo acres of city-owned land for <br />industrial development. Other cities, such as Rogers and Maple Grove, eagerly welcomed retail, industrial <br />and residential projects, bringing in developers who found Anoka and Ramsey were running short on <br />land. <br />Although companies have the option of developing industrial parks and commercial space farther outside <br />the metro, Little said second- and third-ring suburbs are proving more attractive because sewer and water <br />services are generally already provided by the Metropolitan Council. Undeveloped communities would <br />require greater expense and effort to install such systems; so although land costs might be lower than <br />those in the northwest suburbs, overall development costs might turn out much higher. <br />Glimpse of the future <br />Rogers, in particular, has become a model for the type of growth that's likely to spread throughout the <br />northwest suburbs, Little said. Several new industrial developments have sprouted up within the past few <br />years as land has become scarce in other areas <br />Thorpe Distributing Co., a distributor of Anheuser-Busch products, was formerly located in Medina <br />When it needed to expand its facilities two years ago, company officials discovered the city didn't have <br />enough room for the additional warehouse space it needed. <br />"We would have preferred to stay where we were, but there was too little land available," said Jack <br />Stevenson, Thorpe's vice president of sales and marketing. The company chose to build in Rogers because <br />the city had the highway system nearby and large tracts of space. <br />Stevenson said rising land values and the boom in development within just the past year have made <br />company officials glad they moved when they did. <br />"What we bought even two years ago would be much more expensive now," he said. "And I don't even <br />know that we'd get it. There's hardly any land left in Rogers to buy." <br />The city is likely to see another building boom now that Cabela's has opened its vast $So million store, <br />featuring an aquarium stocked with sport fish, an indoor archery range and shooting gallery and a 28- <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.