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Newspaper Clipping - Newspaper Clipping Scan - Article and brochure from Eagandale Center Industrial Park. - 10/22/1980Fo .DER 13EG,I NS Commerce, industry, hoUsifl make Eagan successful %� (This is the fourth in a series of articles on the growth and development in Eagan.) By JUDY STRACHAN Staff Writer EAGAN -- According to the comprehensive. land use'plan for the city of Eagan, 3,215 acres are zoned for industrial use, and,1,395 acres are zoned for commercial use. • - • Commerce and industry are. what "makes the community," according to Tom Hedges, Eagan city administrator. Industrial and commercial areas provide employment for the residents'; Iprovide a broad tax base for schools and governmental agen- cies; and they provide the ser- vices needed by the residents. "It- takes all three," said. Hedges, "housing, commerce, .and industry, to make a suc- :r_gssful community." • • Rauenhorst Corporation and Northwestern Mutual Life In- surance have combined in.a joint 'venture -of"'industrial ;develop: 'ment in Eagan, called Eagandale •Center'Industrial Park. Eagandale consists of 1,500 acres located in the northeast corner of the city, comprising almost half of Eagan's industrial community. According to James Williquett, the real estate representative for Rauenhorst, "The company pur- chased most of the land for Eagandale in 1966, and began development in 1968. We ex- pected the growth sooner," said Williquett, but access was a deterent." He explained that the In- terstate 494 bridge and road were scheduled to open in •1965. Then it was postponed Iit 1968, 1972, "and now it's scheduled to be built. in 1982. We predicted the growth, but we didn't think it would lake this long.'' Eagandale is situated for highway access on Hwy. 55, 135E, and 1494. It also has daily service from, the Milwaukee Road railroad; with several spur tracks through the center. Tom Davis, the real estate representative for Northwestern Mutual Life, said that Eagandale now has over 40 companies - •operating in the center. Approximately-900 acres of the 1,500. acre center remain' undeveloped. "We plan to have the center' completely developed and occupied in 10 years," said Wilfiquelt.--,"1'he .Cedar -.Ave.;. bridge opening helped a lot," ad- ded"llavis. '"1'lie improvements to Hwy. 55 and the 1494 inter- change will also add tremendous access to Eagandale," said Davis. .Eagandale is the largest • in- dustrial park in Eagan, and the largest in Dakota -County. Eagan - dale is bounded by Hwy. 55, Yankee Doodle Rd., Pilot Knob ....... —........... —... —g li 12 13 ' IS 1 1 MvNruttm x8 glii 7.42 Ac. 4Ift Cr sir L 'P un ity ..'9 a P 293%31 32 33 34 TS '2 str ,AMERICAN' &.PRODUCE 28.3 AC. ZONED R-6 33 34 35 • ae�ueritqui < 11 5/.ic f wpm KEY TO OTHER OCCUPANTS 1-Aircraft Office Building 2-Diesel Service Company 3-Mark E. Jones Company 4-F. H. Bethke - 5-Chicago Tube & Iron 6-Gould National Batteries 7-Picker Medical Products 8-E&Q Fabricators 8-Wyeth Laboratories 10-U.S. Warehouse 11-Outboard Marine Corporation 12-Northwestem Bell Telephone Company 13- Eka Enterprises, Inc. • 14- Batesirille Casket 15-Eagan Fire Station 16-Transiiwrap Co. Inc 17-Don Harley & Associates 18-Borchert Ingersoll, Inc. • 19-Sales Service Machine Tod Co. 20-1ritoovestol Burton • vom.E WOOLEROAO 2 EXCE,TION Rd., and the new 1494. Other industrial areas in Eagan include the Sperry Univac Company on Yankee.11oodle Rd. :and Pilot Knob Rd., and the area .north of Hwy. 13, which includes Meadow View, Sibley Terminal •Industrial; Park, and Cedar In- dustrial Park. According to Williquett, the in- dustrial areas.- of Eagan have \0 several advantages that are im- portant to industrial growth, in- cluding proximity to the major ;facilities of the international air port, sports centers; and regional shopping; proximity to both the Minneapolis • and St. Paul business districts; and the access by major highways, the railroad, and the river. • JAMES'WILLIQUET.T and Tom Davis; real estate represen- tatives from Rauenhorst Corporation and' Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, examine the occupancy - map of Eagandale Center Industrial Park's 1,500 acres. Rauenhorst Corp. has occupancy along Eagandale Blvd., and the two companies have combined in a joint venture to develop the county's largest industrial park. Im . 4 NDNF1lSTFIN G, 3 4 5ORPERY sU[YICEINC. 4 •• 'rllr�� .9- la ma MI mee�o�� MINNESOTA HIGHWAY PLAN SUBJECT TO CHANGE pop, IT90M 923, LONE.OAK Ro ECONOMICS. LABORATORY': 123456 NATIONAL BUILDING' CENTER FL5. ® ai F.?E7 ne v j-T'Ll EAGANDALE,,CENTER Industrial Park is the largest .in- dustrial area in Eagan, and the largest in Dakota County. Encompassing 1,500-. acres, Rauenhorst Corp. and Nor- thwestern Mutual Life Insurance have combined forces to develop the remaining 900 acres. The companies hope to Y7f have the area fully developed and occupied in the next 10 years. About 99% of the land in Eagandale is zoned I1 (light- industrial), with about 40 companies now occupying the park. 11 W oyo attends an all girls na, "nearly everybody drives a RENATE SCHENKEL, front center, is surrounded by her American family, the Vogens. Front row, from left: parents Ronda and Al; back row: Tove, Bjorn, Chris. with h strains and buses," !)yo said. To get to school she had to take three trains and a bus, which wasn't really the best thing for her studying in school: "When I get to school I was so tired, but it's comfortable here." Meals are another thing that is usually different from culture to culture, and this case is no excep- tion. For Renate, the biggest TUESDAY NIGHT THURSDAY NIGHT SATURDAY MORNING Burnsville PS BURNSVILLE--The PSAT/NMSQT (Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test/Na- tional Merit Scholarship Qualify- ing Test) will be administered to interested Burnsville High School juniors Saturday, Oct. 25 from 8 a.m. until noon in the high school cafeteria. Juniors should sign-up and pay the $4.24 fee in the counseling of- fice before Friday, Oct. 24. By taking the test, students will find out how they rank among college -bound juniors across the country in the verbal and math reasoning abilities measured by the test. The PSAT/NMSQT is STARRING THE READY -FOR PRIME TIME BANKERS We're talking here about real banking personnel trained and ready for action. Assisting you one-on-one, face-to-face. Ready to open new accounts, process deposits, take loan applications and explain our services. On Tuesday and Thursday nights we stay open until 8:00 p.m. Right in the middle of prime time. When most banks have packed up and gone home. And on Saturday mornings, our Ready For Prime Time Bankers once again come to you live and in person. From 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Because sometimes you need banking help that you can't get at an auto bank or from a machine. Tuesday night, Thursday night, Saturday morning. Live. And only at the Burnsville Center office of Northwestern Bank Southwest. Live Hours Mon., Wed., & Fridays 9:00 am to 4:30 pm Tuesdays & Thursdays 9:00 am to 8:00 pm Saturdays 9:00 am to 1:00 pm NORTHWESTERN BANK SOUTHWEST Burnsville Center Office A 2154 Burnsville Center (435-8625) An Affiliate of Northwest Bancorporation Member FDIC BANCO RAUENHORST PRESENTS .. . An original system of design, engineering, con- struction and financing or leasing of customized buildings created by one co-ordinated organization. Sharing in the Rauenhorst 'Know How' eliminates waste in individual efforts and brings to the new owner a quality building representing the own- er's needs and the full efficiency of every dollar invested. From the PRESIDENT .. TOTAL RESPONSIBILITY ... from the inception of your building project to its ultimate completion is our guiding principle. Our organization is geared to provide all essential elements required for the complete design, engineering, construction and financing of your project under one unified con- tract. The coordination of all phases of a project eliminates duplication of effort and provides for the most efficient construction schedule and "on time" delivery of your facility. When you consider Rauenhorst ...we accept TOTAL RESPONSIBILITY. THE FOLLOWING FIRMS HAVE USED RAUENHORST CORPORATION FOR THEIR MANY AND VARIED PROJECTS Archdiocese of St. Paul Camelot Restaurant College of St. Catherine College of St. Thomas Control Data Corporation Countryside Rambler Empire Photosound Incorporated Farmers Home Mutual Insurance Co. Gill Brothers Funeral Chapel Howard Johnson's Industrial Gasket Co. Interstate G.M. Diesel Lakeside Industries Lowell I n n The Meadowbrook Co. Minnesota Farm Bureau New Holland - Sperry Rand Normandale Golf Club Pacific Toy House Pillsbury Printed Circuits Inc. Product Design & Engineering Inc. Ranch House Research Inc. Rosemount Engineering Co. Smith -Corona Marchant Inc. Texaco Toro Mfg. Co. Twin City Biscuit Co. University of Minnesota United Mailing Corp. Vaughn's Xerox Corporation RAUENHORST CORPORATION 4444 RAUENHORST CIRCLE • MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55435 EAGANDALE CENTER NDUSTRIALPARK MEN DOTA INTERNATIONAL +AIRPORT 1 EAGANDALE CENTER INDUSTRIAL PARK EAGAN RAUENHORST CORPORATION 4444 RAUENHORST CIRCLE • MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55435 FOR MORE DETAILED INFORMATION CALL WA 7 7777 FOR MORE DETAILED INFORMATION CALL WA 7-7777 EXCELLENT LOCATION • DIRECT ACCESS TO INTERSTATE HIGHWAYS #494 AND #35W AND TRUNK HIGHWAY #55 • TWO MILES TO MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT • NINE MILES TO DOWNTOWN MINNEAPOLIS • SEVEN MILES TO DOWNTOWN ST. PAUL • ZONED INDUSTRIAL AND RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT • NATURAL GAS • MUNICIPAL WATER, SANITARY SEWER AND STORM SEWER • RAILROAD TRACKAGE • ALL UNDERGROUND POWER FACILITIES - ONE OF THE FIRST IN THE NATION • 500 ACRE INDUSTRIAL PARK UNDER GROUND POWER FACILITIES • ONE OF THE FIRST IN THE NATION • ELIMINATES UNSIGHTLY POLES, WIRES AND CABLES ABOVE GROUND Y:1GE 2E nd ustr•a lPark9 1� S �C"'- � -41Q �J , DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE — BURNSVILLE — EAGAN SECTION In Ea an Has 100 Acres � TO MIILEAPOLI6 9 MILES TO AM RT I METRO► TA STA01 4 LEGEND 1 .my Hawn Oryl•IDM°OP smarm NAND t 0004 OO.A •-Ortip* b A1,IJ[D YAK 3JOES -..LA PILLI STORM 4 OSNTIM. SIZIS110211Z, b US'LYRD00 •, :ARORAPT 0021CI' O.SSNS T .0111121. swam( adairMY • .VU.AYM[ BOM'M UJNN* B MAR[ Z. JOIILS 0011142111, 10 LNAMOAL1 PLAZA II AMERICAN FRUIT BPRODUCE # 01110A00 TUBS B IROM 2. P.. IIICO#PORATED 1.4 RE.A. 12PRESS A GARAGE 15 EASANDAL[ MAEHOUS[ IS SPRAYT5CN 8M: IT KKK COR•. IS ECONOMICS LASORATORY. If THE O0NALDS0N CO. EO C.A. ROBERTS COP EI tAIKYHOR ST MN St 32 PLOL'B DAUMIS E3 POULIOT p[•i4N OUTLOT 2 A MAP of the 1100 acre Eogandale Center Industrial Park in Eagan township is shown above with about a score of industries located there or in the process of building. Companies located there include New Holland Machine, the first tenant; Coca Cola Bottling Midwest, Villaume Box and Lumber, U.S. Ply- wood -Champion Papers, Donaldson Company, Economics Laboratory, REA Express, and many others. Developer of the industrial park is the Rauenhorst Development Corporation, based in Edina, and captained by Gerald Rauenhorst, an unknown builder a few years ago. Transportation leads many firms to locate in the Eagan site, with availability of man- power another factor. OUT.07 3 OUTLOT 7 OUTLOT 6 OUTLOT 5 OU*LOT 4 TO ST. PA 7 MILES JUNE 19, 1969 SCALE I". 4001 ROCHESTER BURNSVILLE - EAGAN SECTION JUNE 19, 1969 Burnsville Office Telephone 890-2530 DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE Highway 13 and Nicollet Ave. (Warrior Building) 'Big Slipper' To Be At Cedarvale JUNE 28 IS the tentative date for the opening of "The Big Slipper," a unique attraction to be erected at the Cedarvale shopping center, Eagan township. Arthur and Michael McCue will operate the attraction which will be 160 feet long, 35 feet high, and made of stainless steel. Having 12 lanes. Michael McCue, who lives at 1781 Serpentine drive, Eagan township, who will operate the slide, said it is "kind of a baby sitter." Chidren and adults will slide on army blankets. Prices will be 10c, 3 tor 25c, or 15 for $1. The In- stallation will be identical to that in the accompanying photo. Hours will be 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. "The Big Slipper" is a national franchise, and has proved successful at many shopping centers in the nation. Moorhead and Rochester have similar slides. The area will be fenced and supervised, and located on a 50 x 200 blacktopped area. It was approv- ed recently by the Eagan planning and town boards. Board Of Review Open Through June 30 The Board of Review for taxes in Burnsville was officiallyopen- ed on Monday, June 16 by the village council and will remain open through June 30. The board is established to handle any questions residents may have about their taxes. Per- sons wishing to question their taxes during this time should con- tact the assessor at the village hall, Eagan To Open Bids July 15 Bids will be received onTues- day, July 15, at 3 p.m. in the Eagan town hall for the Blackhawk Road Improvement project No. 25 and for the Trunk SewerExits improvement project No. 29, Ph. 1. For additional information, see separate legals this issue. School Board To Consider Budget Tonight The fifth draft of the budget for District 191 will be one of the prime matters to be con- sidered by the school board of District 191 at their meeting to- night, Thursday, June 19, begin- ning at 8 p.m. in the board room of the Burnsville High school. Along with the presentation of this most recent budget draft will be a discussion of the district's financial health. Related to financial matters will be a report on legislation af- fecting the district, as passed by the last session of the Minnesota Legislature and a Board of Edu- cation Committee report con- cerning the Citizen's Revenue Committee report presented in March of this year. Queen Of Snows Coming To Eagan July 4 Parade Eagan township's annual July 4 celebration sponsored by Eagan Jaycees will be this year featur- ing winter carnival royalty. Ap- pearing will be Miss Mary La Fond, Queen of the Snows. Miss LaFond is 19 years old, and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eu- gene LaFond, 1904 Marshall ave- nue, St. Paul. She is sponsoredby Montgomery Ward where shehas been employed as an adjustment clerk in the customer r• ations Rahn Park Paint In Is Saturday A "paint -in" is scheduled at bids on the stump removal at Cedar Pond. Charlotte McPherson reported on only one sure volunteer for the paint -in. Paint and other sup- plies are to be supplied by the township. Possible sites for parks were discussed. Mrs. Scott stressed the need for sites suitable for winter sports such as skiing, as this has become very popular with all ages. All members agreed sites chosen should have multiple uses throughout the year. The group adjourned at 10:30 p.m. Another meeting is scheduled for June 23. Auto Auction Yard Gets Council Veto By HILDA KUEHL Staff Writer Echoing councilman Holmes' remark that " . . . this is a form of industry we can do with- out," the village council voted unanimously Monday night to deny the request of Arrow Develop- ment to construct an auto auc- tion yard on the southeast corner of County Road 42 and 5. Plans for the business in- cluded construction of two build- ings — an auction building and a "fix -up" building, with the vehi- cles being stored outside. A simi- lar business is presently being operated just west of Savage on Highway 101. Petitioners for the project ob- jected to many of the require- ments stipulated by the Planning Commission. Included were 30 foot setbacks on all sides, fenc- ing, screening with shrubs and bricking of the buildings. They objected to having 22% of the land • .. althou h • . _ Woman Injured In Floral Shop Eagan township police re- sponded to an emergency call June 11 at 11:07 a.m. Lucille White, 908 Jefferson, St. Paul, cut a finger at Ned- ved's Florist in the Cedarvale shopping center. She was taken to Fairview Southdale hospital, Edina. Council Defers Action On Trailer Park Permit Carl Gans Named Byrne Principal Carl Gans, 29, of Prior Lake, and formerly a teacher in the Burnsville school system, has been named principal of William Byrne elementary school. Gans is replacing James Tor- bert who will be on sabbatical leave for the next year, pursuing an advanced degree at Columbia University in New York City. Gans is a graduate of Central High school, received his bache- lor of science degree from Augs- burg college and his master of science degree from Mankato State college. He taught for three years in District 191 schools and has worked for the IBM corpora- tion for the past two years. During his employment with IBM, Gans taught for one year at the Minneapolis Education Center for IBM and was a mem- ber of a sales team working with insurance firms. He has attended various IBM in-service schools during the past two years. Gans will assume his new du- ties at Byrne school on July 1 and will be pictured in a forth- coming Tribune article, one of a series about local school princi- pals. 260 Apartment Units OKd Near Vista View The village council has given their approval to the first phase of a planned unit development for the southwest corner of the Highway 13 - SMART DISCOVERY A visitor at the golf club teed u. for the first hole, made a wild County DFL Central Group To Meet June 26 The Dakota County D.F.L. Cen- tral Committee will meetThurs- day, June 26 at the MurphyHouse, 2600 Highway 13, Burnsville. Business meeting is at 8 p.m. Program, open to the public, be- gins at 8:30. Mrs. Jean Patrick of 6739 Irving avenue S., Richfield, co- ordinator of the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee, and Macario Brustos, Delano, California, Mexican -American representative of the Unite d Farm Workers Organizing Com- mittee, will present the film, "Decision at Delano" and will discuss ways in which Dakota county can aid in the table grape boycott. The United Farm Work- ers is a part of the A.F.L.- C.I.O. and both the St. Paul and Minneapolis A.F.L.-C.I.O. are aiding in the boycott. The Trades and Labor Assembly has also passed a resolution supporting the grape boycott. Cub Pack 435 To Go On Overnight Hike Cub Pack 435 of Burnsville will hold its annual overnight hike on Friday, June 20, andSaturday, June 21. The activities will start at 5:00 p.m. Friday and continue to 3:00 p.m. Saturday at the Burnsville Park Tract on Coun- ty Road 11. Friday night supper and Saturday morning breakfast will be provided free of charge by the pack - lunch on Saturday will be left up to the indivi- duals. Cubs attending the hike will participate in an event for a nIumber of items of camping • uipment including a four man nt, cook stove, lanterns, etc. AYBE You can't tell - maybe a fish es home and lies aboutthe size the bait he stole. - Journal, ilwaukee. t Eagan By HILDA KUEHL Staff Writer Despite lengthy and sometime heated arguments and the in- troduction of innumerable figures supporting the opposing posi- tions, the village council has de- ferred action on the request for expansion of the Sunny Acres Trailer court just south of the Buck Hill ski area. Action on the request awaits a report on possible funding of a sanitary sewer system in the area. Edward M. Connelly, the ap- plicant, has asked for a condi- tional use permit for construc- tion of an additional 112 trailer lots north of the present Sunny Acres site. The Planning Commission re- commended denial of the request on the basis of improper zoning, sanitation problems and the op- position of the Lakeville school district to such expansion. With regards to the zoning of the area, the village main- tains that the area is now zoned for single family homes, while the applicant maintains that the former town board had OK'd the rezoning. While the applicant c 1 aims that the present sanitation sys- tem is adequate for the trailer park, nearby residents list their complaints about the smell from the present septic system. Lakeville Superintendent of Schools Don McGuire appeared at the hearing Monday night and presented the position of the Lakeville board as being against the expansion of any trailer park. The Sunny Acres park is lo- cated in the Lakeville school district and the district main- tains that the revenue collected from the park is inadequate to support the children from the area attending Lakeville schools. The attorney for Connelly, on the other hand, presented fig- ures showing that Sunny Acres was paying more for the sup- port of children in the Lake- ville schools than those coming from the Glenn addition of homes located in Lakeville. The owner of the Buck Hill ski area expressed concern_gbout the erosion that might result with further development of the trail- er park. The engineer for the project said that steps to avoid erosion would most certainly be taken since any erosion of the hill would hurt the trailer park more than the ski area. Connelly's request has been nnn+imme.A {nAof,ni+nl., n n n A i n 173t't'-0£8 (31-9) NOHd 1.£1795 VIOSENNIW `S11OdV3NNIW HIfOS 3f1N2AV S3XLIEX 006L 1:I31N20 1VIONVNId N1:I3ISEMHILION I/ Noiinaoda03 isaoHNanna SHI3df13A34 SHOlfVH I NOO SH3RNION3 )WVd. �niaisnaNi IIILNIO 3-uvaNVw3 EAGANDALE CENTER INDUSTRIAL PARK LOCATION DESCRIPTION A CENTRAL POINT SOUTH-8 MILES FROM MINNEAPOLIS AND 6 MILES FROM ST. PAUL AT FUTURE INTERCHANGE 1-494, 35E & TRUNK HIGHWAY 55 UTILITIES (UNDERGROUND) GAS —PEOPLES NATURAL GAS ELECTRIC —NORTHERN STATES POWER & DAKOTA COUNTY ELECTRIC ZONING INDUSTRIAL —RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT TRANSPORTATION HIGHWAY 55 & FUTURE FREEWAYS 494 & 35E AIRPORT-3 MILES AWAY RAILROAD—MILWAUKEE ROAD RAUENHORST CORPORATION ENGINEERS CONTRACTORS DEVELOPERS 7900 XERXES AVENUE SOUTH, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55431 (612) 830-4424 NORTHWESTERN FINANCIAL CENTER co w x 1 x Minneapolis- O St Paul International Airport • r 1 • • • 0 • •• RAUENHORST KEY LOCATIONS O CIRCLE STAR BUSINESS CENTER Q GOLDEN VALLEY Q NEW HOPE LITTLE CANADA Q WOODDALE CENTER INDUSTRIAL PARK EAGANDALE CENTER INDUSTRIAL PARK Q NORMANDALE CENTER INDUSTRIAL PARK OPUS 2 EAGANDALE CENTER INDUSTRIAL PARK EXCEPTION ti 2354(. 123 "' 2.0 215.41 VALO I 1591 Ac 259 (if 21 20 2.0 2.0 AC..'AC N S.\IL1v//l1t 2.303 25`9 32l.9c, 1 1.4$14 ,c. 3�. o P,, 220Ac� m .(7A.� 2.0 Ac 370 7 5.51 AC. qo o\ w 2575 Ac 12 �1 I\9 2.S$5 RG 33 l; 20 P Ac 352.63 2.475 Ac 390 19 N 2,0ACti 2.i$3 qc 13 2.6/5 44 2.618 2ao 2.062Ac 2II13 1.834 10 1.80 Ac 11.8 ZONED 28.3 AC. ZONED R-6 6 AIRCRAFT OFFICE BUILDING 7 DIESEL SERVICE COMPANY 9 MARK E.JONES COMPANY 0 F. H. BATHKE , 12 CHICAGO TUBE & IRON 13 BANN INCORPORATED 16 PICKER MEDICAL PRODUCTS 27 E & Q FABRICATORS 28 WYETH LABORATORIES 29 U.S. WAREHOUSE 30 OUTBOARD MARINE CORPORATION 31 NORTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 32 ELCA ENTERPRISES, INC. 33 BATESVI LLE CASKET 35 EAGAN FIRE STATION 37 TRANSILWRAP CO., )NC. 38 DON HARL EY & ASSOCIATES 40 BORCHERT INGERSOLL, INC. 4 1 SALES SERVICE MACHINE TOOL CO. EXCEPTION 03 2'4.9 445.-7 35I•b M 1.0 COCA COLA ik & OFFI 370. 2,740 b,, ‘. AC `1 9,3Q6 Al oUTLDT 2 2.75A6 EXcEP T 'ON EXCEPTION EXCEPTIODI OUTLOT 7 ouTLOT7 4.362 AC OUTLOT 6 9.383,1c /3/2.94 OUTLOT 3 6.396 Ac 5'/0 26 EXCEPTION APPROX 6: OUTLOT 5 9,382 qc. S36,54 OUTLOT 4 7.824 Ac /39.94- U.S. POSTAL SERVICE BULK MAI L CENTER 0 469.24 YANKEE DOODLER(7AD EXCFP. j 5 EXCEP TI ON 12.969 .c 940 U.S. POST OFFICE 1.033A`45„ 2. D33Ac 4S0 1 8 EXCEP MINNESOTA HIGHWAY PLAN SUBJECT TO CHANGE 67/ Ac 9 I.197/Ac.. -12,0 1.671oc. 7.$38 Ac 2R IS I.822. Ac 16 1.822Ac 785.01 F822 Ac 18 5.3s5,1.2 eg 19 1•2:2$ AC 20 1.2T9 Ac 21 s3solZ$ 8 1iO X 100 II 597k ROADWAY EXPRESS 0 0 9 AL. 92825 784.5o 11.53P c LONE OAK (1 3 APOLLO RO NATIONAL BUILDING CENTER 5.9.37 ,As%21O �.8t1 Ac 0. 1:f2° xc. aas40 25.848 AcCEPiioN S706-Ac i 21 5.899 Ac- •776 AC. •776 Ac .7T7Ac too apt a 379 141•2$4Ac a 815 .77/AC :16.77 AC 17 .780Av IS 180�� 12 137..19.7e1, 4 RED OWL 8 s.0 N /25 SCALE 1" =600 Downtown /MINNE,POLIS Downtown ST. PAUL 1 NORTHWESTERN LJ FINANCIAL CENTER to X CC X LONE oAK RD EXCEPTION 9 5/3.09 177.41 1 21,5 ia>,e0 20.781Ac 23 •783 Ac 24 .784Ac 26 -785 27 .785 30 .787 9 3.211 k i 99 9 31.3n ,1� . 1.35' 209.(p 10 23C.Q 11 9 9047 12. 113 3DV O M S O z 2 La ot wCr 23.689eac a24 Minneapolis - St. Paul V ♦ International Airport • 1 1 e .♦ • • • EAGANDALE CENTER INDUSTRIAL PARK 55 FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT RAUENHORST CORPORATION / i ENGINEERS CONTRACTORS DEVELOPERS NORTHWESTERN FINANCIAL CENTER SUITE 2200 7900 XERXES AVENUE SOUTH MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55431 PHONE (612) 830-4424 BROKERS INVITED THIS SITE PLAN SUBJECT TO POSSIBLE FUTURE CHANGES 457 N. Snelling Ave. St. Paul, MN 55104 (612) 642-0068 2750 Nicollet Ave. S Minneapolis, MN 554 (612) 870-8864 SPECIFY NUMBER OF PRINTS OR ENLARGEMENTS DESIRED OPPOSITE NEGATIVE NUMBER. IMPORTANT PLEASE DO NOT CUT NEGATIVES FOR REGULAR PRINTS 0 OA 8 8A 16 16A 24 24A 32 32A 1 1A 9 9A 17 17A 25 25A 33 33A 2 2A 10 10A 18 18A 26 26A 34 34A 3 3A 11 11A 19 19A 27 27A 35 35A 4 4A 12 12A 20 20A 28 28A 36 36A 5 5A 13 13A 21 21A 29 29A 37 37A 6 6A 14 14A 22 22A 30 30A 38 38A 7 7A 15 15A 23 23A 31 31A 39 39A SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR ENLARGEMENTS NEG. NO. QUAN. SIZE st)s