COREY GAFFER PHOTOGRAPHY
Minneapolis Public Service Building
With its shiny metal exterior and relatively low scale, this 11-story building gleams like a jewel box. A brilliant complement to the solid granite, 19th- and 20th-century architecture of City Hall and the Hennepin County Government Center, it’s also a bright punctuation point for the Government Center Plaza.
Designed by Minneapolis-based MSR Design and the Danish firm Henning Larsen, it boasts an aluminum-and-glass wall system with beveled frames wrapping every window. The frames repeat across the facade to create an illusion of depth and rhythm while using very thin materials. As the sun passes during the day, the frames gleam with changing prismatic colors against the darker glass.
“The facade shimmers like the surface of a lake,” says Eric Amel, MSR Design’s project architect.
The architects also created terraces on every floor, which will allow employees access to fresh air during the workday — something of a rarity for urban office buildings.
The 370,000-square-foot building was designed to consolidate several city departments and their 1,200 employees, who had been scattered across several downtown buildings.
Its unique public entry makes the most of the location.
In a northern climate, placement can make the all the difference between a cold or an inviting entry.
Many of the proposals for the building placed the main entry on the northeast corner across from City Hall, said Council Member Lisa Goodman, who was a member of the committee that selected the architects. But Henning Larsen stood out because “they performed a solar gain and wind study showing that location to be very windy,” Goodman said.
The result is a more sheltered entry shifted about 100 feet up 4th Avenue.
This entry opens to a two-story lobby, which leads to the ground-floor public meeting rooms. There also is a grand wood stairway that sweeps up to a sunny mezzanine.
From here, visitors can take a gently rising walkway that connects to the skyway system at 6th Street.
The walkway is visually independent, seeming to elegantly float through the two-story lobby. In addition to being attractive, it offers noteworthy views, including the Great Seal of Minneapolis, which is mounted on the lobby wall. The massive, 20-ton seal was carved in the 1960s for the old Minneapolis Auditorium and kept in storage for the past 30 years.
From the walkway, a panorama of downtown’s architectural materials unfolds. You can see the massive granite walls of Government Center, the travertine marble-clad towers of First Bank Plaza, the Art Deco CenturyLink building built with warm Kasota limestone, and City Hall, with its Ortonville granite.
Before the final design was approved, city representatives, MSR and Henning Larsen studied public service buildings around the country to find what made them effective and customer-friendly.
The new Public Service Building is a one-stop shop where residents can pay a water bill, apply for a building permit, or meet with a city planner. These and other services are now housed at the bright yellow service counter on the mezzanine level.
Early in the planning process, there was debate about whether to connect the building to the skyway system. Those who dislike skyways say they take the people, the businesses and the vitality off the streets.
But the Public Service Building makes its skyway a year-round civic space — one that is indoors yet connected to the city. The walkway and grand staircase clearly connect to 4th Avenue and Government Center Plaza.
In an era when government buildings require high security, the architects did a masterful job of designing a public service building that feels open to the public. They did so by separating the secure office zones two floors above the public areas.
The floors devoted to employees have abundant daylight, quiet spaces for personal time, improved indoor air quality, and a stunning top-floor conference space, cafe and terrace.
The new building and the concurrent renovations to City Hall will allow the city to sell properties and end leases on other buildings used to house employees, said Mark Ruff, the Minneapolis city coordinator.
With its green technologies that will sharply reduce environmental impacts and energy costs and its 100-year life span, the Public Service Building is exactly what the city sought, said Goodman.
It was never looking for a grand building — but a lasting one.
“We’re not spending money on a building or its architecture,” Goodman said. “We’re investing in the people working there and the people they serve.”
By Frank Edgerton Martin
Frank Edgerton Martin is a landscape historian, preservation planner, and writer for design firms and publications.
A beer on the patio at the aptly named Bad Weather | Bad Weather Brewing / Facebook
Break out the choppers and snowmobile suits, outside is open! Recently, open-air patios were able to reopen and many restaurant and bars broke out the heat lamps and fired up the fire pits to serve diners ready to braze chilly temps for the chance to dine and sip outdoors.
It’s worth noting that all structures have been banned. So, restaurants that invested in those geodesic domes are out of luck, and any tents have to have open walls.
*These are a few of the patios that are open and serving while outdoor dining is once again permitted. Tables are limited to four people, masks are mandatory, and each businesses hours are subject to change.
This beyond pizza, pizza restaurant and brewery is serving it’s incredibly comforting food and inventive beers outside, for take away, and delivery.
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Utepils large patio re-opened this weekend with fires, and ordering window so people won’t have to set foot inside, and a new Munich dunkel. The garden is open seven days a week.
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This hearty taco spot and bar has re-opened its patio in Lyn/Lake.
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Four patio tables are out and set to serve with a few heaters. Kids and pups are welcome.
Fulton’s taproom is offering reservations for its picnic tables in the North Loop.
All Red Cow locations have patios open.
Heather’s tent is open and reservations are available by calling the restaurant.
This Northeast brewery’s patio is open with picnic tables under tent cover. Make an online reservation.
Minneapolis Cider Company’s patio opened for cider, crepes, hot mulled cider, and pickleball.
The sidewalk patio outside this beloved neighborhood restaurant is once again open. No reservations needed.
This neighborhood bar by the light rail with the tasty burgers has opened its small patio.
Urban Growler’s patio is again serving beer by the light of its fire pits Wednesday through Sunday.
Lake Monster Brewing has online reservations available for its dog-friendly patio.
This beloved neighborhood bar has cheap Hamm’s beer and fantastic Midwestern-style, square-cut pizza on its West 7th patio.
Both Red Rabbit locations have the heaters out on their patios with online reservations available.
The Gnome has gotten creative with outdoor seating, with drive-in holiday movies regularly selling out the parking lot. When it’s not movie night, seats and fire pits are out and available for reserving. See the restaurant’s website and social media for more information.
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Now, here is a restaurant whose culture seems ready for cold weather. Icy vodka served on their Cathedral Hill patio behind the restaurant on Selby Avenue.
Sip locally made beer that appreciates a good snow storm on West 7th.
Waldmann has always excelled at making things festive and bright during the holiday season. The patio is now open with picnic tables and fire pits.
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Hope Breakfast Bar had inteded to do igloos, until there was a ban on all structures. Still, street side seats are available for all day breakfast, hot coffee drinks, and a portion of its proceeds are used to help feed hungry neighbors (in particularly those in the service industry facing hardship.)
Patrick McGovern’s patio is a stunner in the summer, and it is open once again.
“It’s just so cold,” Jan Rolfe said. “Then it just goes away about a minute later and we just sit in for about three minutes.”
In fact, every morning, a group that calls themselves “submergents,” have a chill start to their day. Some in the group claim that sitting in the cold water increases their metabolism. Some say it decreases inflammation. Others also claim their mind feels clearer after a dunk.
“When I first did it it hurt so bad, I didn’t think I could go all the way in and actually after about a minute you don’t feel the pain anymore,” Rolfe said with a laugh.
“The initial 20 seconds is like really hard, but you just need to control your breathing and then it gets easier,” Harriet’s sister Sylvia White said.
Last Friday, Steve Jewell led the group into the water.
“So we’re going to walk in, walk up to our waist, drop down to our knees,” he explained to the group. “Cross your hands if you’d like. I have a timer on and we’re going to pop up at three minutes.”
Sitting there, stuck in your own thoughts and fighting time may be the hardest part of it all. Many took to closing their eyes, or just staring off into space, focused on mindfulness.
“I feel terrific, once you’re in, and you do deep breathing, you stop hyperventilating,” Jewell said. “What really happens, is your body temp takes over and it warms the water around you, so I’m not cold right now.”
And just like that, it was quite a sight. Just a handful of bobbleheads on a yet to be frozen lake. For many time is passing as normal. For others, like molasses.
So why in Lake Harriet’s name…would people do this– let alone, return each morning?
Again, for some it’s a mind thing.
“when you get out it’s just so clear in your mind,” Rolfe said.
“There’s a sense of empowerment where you can face something like the cold and overcome your mind– with your body,” Alex Freese said. “So it’s just a daily practice.”
“It’s not just crazies running in the lake, well people do that too but if you notice, there are people who swim out here–there’s some value to cold temp swimming,” Jewell said. “The water is always going to be warmer than ice, so at least 35 degrees, the duration is up to you, we don’t stay longer than three minutes.
And the most Minnesotan answer of them all–it’s just something to do, that keeps you outside even during the winter season.
Midwesterners– we love our outdoor activity and to me this is another way of extending that outdoor activity,” Jewell said.
The Lake Harriet ‘submergents’ meet each morning at 7:55 at Lake Harriet.
Prada spring 2021
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Some things just cannot be explained. This year has abounded with baffling information: What is the Monolith? What was that running down Rudy Giuliani’s face? Why were Ana de Armas and Ben Affleck always going on all those walks? Wondering about the mysteries of our strange-and-getting-stranger universe is an occupation in itself.
So, here we are with yet another unknowable truth: the Pantone Colors of the Year. For the second time in the organization’s 20-history of assigning colors to calendar years, its governing body has chosen two hues: Ultimate Gray and Illuminating. Yes, gray and yellow are the standout colors of 2020—not COVID virus red, not surgical mask pale blue, not Insta-activist graphic pastel pink, suffragette white, or the deadened charcoal of the camera-off function on Zoom. I understand that last year at this time the organization already chose its most digital color—a shade called Classic Blue used for links—but gray and yellow feel somehow off.

“We will ask what is happening in socio-economic terms in the world to make sure that we pay attention to what the public at large is telling us, what their needs are, what their hopes are,” Leatrice Eiseman, the executive director of the Pantone Color Institute, told my colleague Julia Hobbs. “With that information gathering, we can do our homework and come up with an intelligent analysis that enables us to decide on the color.”
The most intelligent analysis might in fact lead to the realization that the big energy of 2020 is actually off. The Pantone Color of the Year was something once so known, so certain, so obvious, and now it has joined the ranks of things we once counted on—time, space, existence, etc.—that have since become unknowable.
The 2021 Pantone Colors of the Year are also quite “Off.” Off-White’s fall 2019 show, “His & Hers,” took place on a checkerboard of yellow and gray squares and closed out with Bella Hadid in shorts and a jacket in the same pattern. One obvious thought: Just as Virgil Abloh sends up mainstream references, so shall Pantone send up Virgil Abloh. I messaged Abloh about the coincidence. “NO WAY WOW” he wrote back.
Pallid gray and sun yellow also happen to be quite beloved Prada hues as well, with Mrs. Prada referencing them time and again since her 1987 debut. A vexing color palette is, in many ways, the racing pulse of a Prada experience: Something that is confusing at first, maybe even ugly, that becomes over time and with analysis, lovely, coveted, and worthy of revisiting. Other designers including Sarah Burton, Alessandro Michele, and Demna Gvasalia—creatives, like Abloh and Mrs. Prada, with a sort of subversive streak—have also touched on the color combo in their work. Maybe Pantone was onto something after all.
By Steff Yotka