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After delays, Duluth begins $18 million seawall reconstruction

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DULUTH — With funding finally in hand, major repairs to the harbor seawall behind the Duluth Entertainment Convention Center, a high-traffic area for ship-viewing and summer tourism, will begin this fall.

The $18 million project is meant to both protect the area from extreme storms and boost the economy. It has been delayed for more than a year as federal and state funding was secured and the cost of steel rose.

About 1,000 feet of eroded wall will be replaced, and the walkway along it will be widened to make room for separate biking and walking paths, along with seating and park-like landscaping. Harbor Drive will remain, but it will narrow.

“This project is going to create a very distinctive and compelling new Duluth space,” Mayor Emily Larson said at a news conference.

It’s expected to connect Canal Park more comfortably to attractions along the waterfront leading to the Pier B complex, including Bayfront Festival Park and the Great Lakes Aquarium. A new seawall will also make it possible for cruise ships to dock. Several Viking ships visited this summer, using tenders to ferry passengers from the ship to shore.

The city will pay $720,000, or 4% of the total project, which will run through 2024. The bulk of the money comes from state bonding and a federal economic development grant.

Parts of the seawall are more than 90 years old. Without the necessary replacement, the walkway along the harbor would be subject to sinkholes, as sections of the Minnesota Slip were before its seawall was repaired in 2018. (That project led to the difficult task of towing the William A. Irvin ship museum out and then back in.)

A vacuum exists under parts of the seawall because of heavy erosion. More frequent and intense storms creating forceful waves that crest the seawall could lead to sidewalk damage similar to what the city’s Lakewalk faced in recent years.

The new seawall is necessary for safety, said Jim Filby Williams, director of city parks, properties and libraries.

But the adjacent boulevard will be “set up to be used and enjoyed and to linger in a way that it simply isn’t today,” he said.



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St. Paul man dies of injuries from fire last week

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A St. Paul man who was in critical condition following a fire last week at his home in the Battle Creek neighborhood has died, marking the city’s eighth fire death this year.

According to a news release from the St. Paul Fire Department, the man was found unconscious in the basement of a house on Nelson Street early in the morning of Oct. 17, after fire crews had extinguished a fire at the two-story residence. Paramedics undertook life-saving measures before taking him to the hospital.

No one else was injured in the fire, which was found to have been accidental and started in the engine of a car parked in the tuck-under garage. The fire was confined to the garage, but heavy smoke filled the house. Smoke detectors enabled others in the house to exit safely, officials said.



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Native of St. Paul’s Rondo neighborhood used NASA tech to revive shuttered company

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That hasn’t ebbed with Simpli-Fi. The startup incorporated in 2018 as a company based out of Florida that integrated technology systems together in commercial buildings to work as a single unit. But business sputtered when the COVID-19 pandemic began, and Campbell had to make staff cuts to his team of 16 employees. He called it one of “the worst times” of his life.

“But during that time is where we made a pivot,” Campbell said.

He set out to find a new technology, eventually spotting NASA’s electronic nose thanks to Brown Venture Group, a St. Paul based firm that supports Black, Latino and Indigenous tech startups. Campbell’s brother, Paul Campbell, is a partner at the firm but said he recused himself from the investment decision.

Chris Campbell was skeptical of the electronic nose’s capabilities at first but sprung for a commercialization license after spending a year researching the technology. By this past summer, he had moved the company to Minnesota and specifically the Osborne building because both are “known for device creation,” he said.

Simpli-Fi’s sensor packs some of the science of gas chromatography and mass spectrometry — which require huge machines — into a sensor the size of a dime, Campbell said. Using nanotubes, the sensor picks up metabolic qualities in the air and breath, he said.

For now, the company is focused on the C. diff-sensing Provectus Canary device, which scans the air around a hospital patient to detect the bacteria that causes the infection, which has gastrointestinal symptoms like diarrhea. The company is working toward the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s approval for using the sensor to detect various diseases.



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Minneapolis man sentenced to 20 years in prison for 2023 murder of neighbor

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A Minneapolis man was sentenced Friday to 20 years in prison for murdering his neighbor in their North Side apartment building last year.

Walter Lee Hill, 59, had pleaded guilty on Monday to second-degree intentional murder. He will get credit for having served nearly a year in jail.

Police were called to the Gateway Lofts on W. Broadway Avenue last November on a report that someone was shot. Officers found Donald Edmondson, 60, dead on the floor of his apartment with a gunshot wound to the chest.

A video camera in the hallway showed Hill knocking on Edmondson’s door, reaching into his sweatshirt pocket and firing his gun once. Hill then left in his Lexus, which officers found near Elliot Park downtown.

They spotted Hill walking nearby, asked for his ID and arrested him when he said something to the effect that they had the right guy.

A witness told police they saw Hill shoot Edmondson, and another said there had been an ongoing dispute between the two. Two days before the murder, Hill had called police because he believed neighbors were breaking into his apartment.

In a statement, Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said Edmondson “should still be alive. A violent act committed with such disregard by Mr. Hill has taken him from his family. This sentence delivers accountability and protects our community, and I hope it brings some measure of peace to Mr. Edmondson’s loved ones as they attempt to move forward with their lives.”



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