Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Menards to buy part of mall lot

Space belonged to Northridge’s Boston Store

- Tom Daykin

Part of the former Northridge Mall parking lot is being sold to Menard Inc. to enhance access for its neighborin­g home improvemen­t store.

The City of Milwaukee would sell the 25,000-square-foot lot, at 8919 N. Granville Station Road, for $80,000, under a new proposal that needs Common Council approval.

The Menards store is at 8110 W.

Brown Deer Road.

The parcel being sold is a small part of the parking lot for the mall’s former Boston Store.

Penzeys Spices owner William Penzey gave the property to the city in December 2017 after his efforts to buy the rest of the former mall failed. Penzey had planned to move his company’s operations to Northridge.

The city Redevelopm­ent Authority in March 2019 disclosed plans to seek a grant to help pay for demolishin­g the former store. That would make the site available for light industrial developmen­t or other new uses.

Also, the city Department of Neighborho­od Services in April 2019 issued a demolition order for the remaining mall, saying the dilapidate­d building was a danger to public safety and health.

A maintenanc­e worker hired by mall owner U.S. Black Spruce Enterprise Inc. died after being electrocut­ed at the property in July 2019.

Black Spruce in June appealed a Milwaukee County Circuit Court ruling that upheld the city’s raze order, which could create around 100 acres north of West Brown Deer Road and west of North 76th Street for new developmen­t.

Black Spruce says it plans to redevelop the mall as a trade mart for Chinese companies to sell their goods to U.S. firms. The company also said the city has overestima­ted the costs of repairing the mall.

The Menards store has been a success story despite the closed mall’s depressing effect on other nearby stores.

The store opened in 2005 after the former Northridge Sears store was demolished.

Menards in 2017 bought a nearby former Pick ’n Save supermarke­t and converted the building into storage space.

In a separate Common Council resolution, the city would write off outstandin­g property taxes, totaling $31,297, tied to the former Boston Store building and its parking lot.

The city previously agreed to forgive those taxes owed by Penzey’s investment group, PNR 2 LLC, in return for him granting the site to the city.

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