A scoop in the newsletter this morning: Details on Mixed Culture Brewing, which a pair of veteran brewery operators are building in the former One on One bike shop at 45th and Minnehaha and could open later this year.
A scoop in the newsletter this morning: Details on Mixed Culture Brewing, which a pair of veteran brewery operators are building in the former One on One bike shop at 45th and Minnehaha and could open later this year.
Residents troubleshoot an irritating new noise — the ones that can hear it, anyway.
In the newsletter: Whatever Whenever - March edition, a good faith attempt to roundup every event in the neighborhood this month.
In the newsletter: LW celebrates 2 years, Lake Street LRT station construction delayed, a neighborhood angle on the Olympics, business reopenings, a church for sale, and much more.
In the newsletter: Full-strength weed is coming to Minnehaha Avenue as soon as this spring.
In the newsletter: A brief detour from ICE coverage to share a shake-up at 36th and Lake: Time Bomb Vintage and Nostalgia Zone will each expand into half of the vacant building that sits between them. And another storied business of similar ilk is rumored to take Nostalgia Zone's old space.
In the newsletter: It's hard to put the splendor of a frozen Minnehaha Falls into words. But plenty have tried.
Joining Ed Kohler — one of those people who seems to know everybody — on his quest to run with 100 different people in 2025.
In the newsletter: A visit to 29th and Dorman, where a new window painting greets passersby and eagle watchers each month.
In the newsletter: The full details on the cult-followed neighborhood bakery's plans for moving to larger and St. Paul-ier pastures in the coming months.
In the newsletter: Upon completion, the house was opened to the public for seven straight days, nine hours a day. Thousands of people filed through, "to glean new ideas on the latest modes of home architecture and furnishings."
In the newsletter: A full-on cornucopia on neighborhood news, including a new playground finally underway at Cooper school, teardowns and rebuilds, work at the 36th Street oak savanna, and more holiday news than you can fit under a tree.
In the newsletter: After the closure of Milkweed took one of the neighborhood's best bulletin boards with it, a tour of the boards that remain.
In the newsletter: Kela Market quietly opened last week, offering traditional Ethiopian groceries and cookware in the heart of what you might call Longfellow's Ethiopian cultural district.
In the newsletter: A breakdown of neighborhood voting patterns, food donation options, changes at Electra Tune, new street signs, holiday markets, Thanksgiving pre-orders, and much more.
In the newsletter: Neighborhood trick-or-treating opportunities, new murals, a celebrity sighting at the Schooner, mill noise, and much more.
In the newsletter: A highlight reel, and map, of Longfellow's Halloween decor.
In what may be the most riveting newsletter to date, a look at four new traffic-calming medians coming to the neighborhood and the bureaucratic details behind their approval.
In the newsletter: A look at the history and architecture of the house, designed by a Frank Lloyd Wright protege, which is for sale for this first time since it was built.
In the newsletter: Whatever Whenever, a roundup of hundreds of events in Longfellow this month. Including more than a few spooky ones.
Plus, upcoming candidate forums, a new tenant in a long-vacant Lake Street space, the best marathon watching spots, a new Falls documentary, seasonal business closing dates, free beer brewed from the Community Hops garden, new plantings along the Greenway, fall color updates, and much more.
In the newsletter: Cornbread didn't miss a beat after the closure of Palmer's forced him to move his weekly Sunday gig to Longfellow's own storied old dive bar.
In the newsletter: Breaking down the neighborhood's 16 happy hour deals on this gray Tuesday morning.
In the newsletter: A sneak peek of the Shepherd's Table cheese shop and deli, ahead of its grand opening tomorrow.
In the newsletter: Tucked into a row of homes, the building doesn't stick out much from its surroundings. But there are clues that it's not a human dwelling.
In the newsletter: A drive down Minnehaha Avenue a quarter-century ago, via a collection of hastily taken photos by a lost-to-history municipal worker.
In the newsletter: Details on the long-awaited deli and cheese shop across from Longfellow Park, set to open September 1.
In the newsletter: A sneak peek of Arya Cafe ahead of its August 9 grand opening, a community meal on 36th Ave, a key hearing for renaming Edmund Boulevard, a new roundabout and speed bumps, a massive loss of groceries due to power outage, an eyebrow-raising deal at Parkway Pizza, and much more.