Peavey Plaza Nomination Gets the Go-Ahead
The future of Peavey Plaza has taken a strategically significant turn for the better. The site, which was previously determined eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places, is proceeding along to actual designation.
On November 5, 2012, the Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission, which had previously voted 8-1 to delay Peavey鈥檚 demolition, voted to recommend Peavey鈥檚 listing in the Register. Then, on November 13, the Minnesota State Review Board concurred in a unanimous vote. The application has been sent to the National Park Service for a final determination, which is due within 45 days of receipt.
Designation is important because the City of Minneapolis and the Minnesota Orchestra have disputed the plaza鈥檚 significance in arguing there are no alternatives to Peavey鈥檚 demolition. Designation would also bolster a lawsuit to preserve Peavey based on the Minnesota Environmental Review Act (which was the basis of a 1993 decision to prevent the demolition of the Minneapolis Armory building because of that site鈥檚 historic and architectural importance). In a November 16, 2012, Finance & Commerce article, University of Minnesota Law School professor Alexandra Klass said: 鈥淭he law protects historic resources that are unique, or that have historic significance that would be endangered if they were removed or changed. That seems to be the significant element here.鈥 Having Peavey listed in the National Register of Historic Places helps make that point.