MN: Dollar General Plans Minneapolis Concept Store, to Employ 15 | Trade and Industry Development

MN: Dollar General Plans Minneapolis Concept Store, to Employ 15

Nov 18, 2020
Dollar General has leased much of the long-vacant first floor of a historic building in Minneapolis with plans to open a new concept store that is more upscale than its traditional discount-merchandising chain.
 
The “DGX Minneapolis” store will bring groceries, “grab & go” salads, toiletries, toys and household, pet and beauty products to the 1898-era Andrus Building at 500 Nicollet Mall in downtown Minneapolis.
 
The 6,000-square-foot store is expected to open early next year. It will occupy space that has been vacant for about 15 or 16 years, Brian Lipson, the managing principal of the TriCoastal Group, which co-owns the Andrus with the Davis Companies of Boston, told the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
 
TriCoastal and Davis Cos. bought the Andrus building in 2017 for about $20 million and spent nearly $4 million renovating the structure.
 
Now that the building facade, lobby, windows and the first three of 11 floors are restored, the lower part of the building is ready for new life, Lipson said. “We are excited about our building. It’s a big change for the neighborhood. It was a chronic vacancy.”
 
In addition to DGX, Xcel Energy will lease the remaining 4,500 square feet of the first floor. Construction on both tenant spaces has begun.
 
“The combination of this new, upgraded retail concept from Dollar General and the activities featuring Xcel — one of our downtown Fortune 500 headquarters companies — will activate a key transit corner,” said Steve Cramer, president of the Minneapolis Downtown Council. “It’s also well located in relationship to the high-density residential district emerging at the North end of Nicollet.”
 
Office tenants on the upper floors of the building will remain. They include the DLR Group architects, the brand and design firm CBX and transportation engineering firm WSP.
 
Conversations with DGX began in May 2019 and were finalized a few weeks ago.
 
The Andrus partners knew they wanted a retail store on the first floor that could cater to the city’s growing residential population, Lipson said. They didn’t want a restaurant or a regular dollar store, which the Dollar General brand is known for, Lipson said. But when the partners learned about the new, smaller and millennial-focused DGX concept, they jumped at the chance to talk to the company about a lease.
 
The effort marks the first DGX concept store in Minnesota, and it is expected to employ about 15 people and compete with Target, Whole Foods, Trader Joe and Lunds & Byerlys. The announcement of its arrival follows several retail store closings and bankruptcies that struck even before the pandemic.