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Even so, Bruce Lambrecht and Rich Pogin, the co-owners of the Rapid Park lot that would house the new Twins stadium, have essentially turned the entire project over to their "development partner." Turns out there are a number of reasons why the move made sense. For starters, it could have served to force the stadium issue at the legislature, spurring lawmakers to approve the sales tax needed by Hennepin County to foot a good portion of the ballpark bill. (That didn't pay off in the short term, but some legislators and even the governor are talking about another special session in the fall to address stadium issues.)
Additionally, Hennepin County needs to buy the air rights and land for a stadium. With Hines on board, the Twinsville owners could boast that they had a legitimate partner to carry forward a city of Minneapolis master plan for Downtown East/North Loop. City leaders have long looked at the mostly industrial area as ripe for gentrification, and Hines would be a significant piece that spurs major public-private redevelopment. Earlier in the session, funding for a Northstar commuter rail line was approved at the Capitol, with a major stop in the heart of the Twinsville. Other transit plans and infrastructure are already in place. In other words, Pogin and Lambrecht all but removed themselves from the political battle that is sure to take place as the land becomes increasingly valuable.
It's a theory that Mike Opat, the Hennepin County commissioner who put together the deal with the Twins, doesn't dispute. "It was smart to get out of the politics of it," Opat says of Lambrecht and Pogin. "They fancy themselves as lobbyists at the Capitol. But the perception was that they were just self-interested land barons."
When the Hennepin County Board held a public hearing on the stadium issue in late April, Dave Lawless, the county's budget director, made a curious comment. Commissioner Gail Dorfman pressed Lawless on the hidden costs in the proposal, especially how much it would cost the county to buy the land. Lawless said some numbers had been bandied about, but declined to say what those were. Then he urged the commissioners, "Don't share those with the public."
"It's a well-guarded secret," says Steve Minn, the former Minneapolis council member who now is a developer around town. "There's a number. I assure you Pogin and Lambrecht have said, 'If you get to X, then you can have it.'" Minn surmises, however, that the number has never been put in writing by either party, because it would then be available through data practices laws.
Sometime around 1985 or 1986, according to Pogin, he and his partner bought the Rapid Park site, along with some other vacant lots that were not particularly desirable two decades ago. But that was before the rejuvenated Warehouse District, the Target Center, and the current downtown housing boom. Through three different interests--Land Partners II, Duddy Limited Partnership, and Minikahda Mini Storage LTD--Pogin and Lambrecht own land assessed at some $16.7 million and bounded by Washington Avenue, North Seventh Street, and Third Avenue North, according to state and county records. (Some believe the land is worth twice as much as that.) According to Hennepin County, the Rapid Park lot is worth some $5.4 million. (Pogin and Lambrecht have another $9.7 million in land from two storage facilities they run in Fridley and St. Louis Park.) A deal the two had offered the county--seven acres of the stadium site for some $13 million and a couple of parcels--went off the table in January.
If the two have learned one thing from sitting on a piece of property that was once left for dead, it's patience. They've also earned the reputation as rather savvy entrepreneurs. After all, they are the ones behind "Twinsville"--a made-up moniker for the area surrounding Rapid Park. Their take-it-or-leave-it attitude toward a ballpark seems a stunning about-face.
"We're on a two-track plan," Pogin says, "Frankly, the stadium makes it a more difficult plan."