The revamped Nicollet Mall will have more trees and places to sit when it reopens next year. But it probably won't have a popcorn wagon.
City officials have said the new design won't include a spot for the old fashioned snack wagon — a fixture on the mall since 1970.
The Red Wagon's owner, Essam Fawzy, said he has broken into tears during calls with the city trying to work out an arrangement.
"I said, 'Where am I supposed to go?' " said Fawzy, who has been selling treats to people strolling the mall for more than a decade.
Nicollet Mall's $50 million overhaul, funded largely by the state and downtown property assessments, is expected to be complete by late 2017. Crews are ripping up the street to make way for trees, outdoor seating and lanterns at the "Art Walk," near where Fawzy's wagon was usually located on 6th Street.
Unlike food trucks, which rumble in and out of downtown every morning, the popcorn wagon sat locked up and gated at night due to the difficulties of moving it — Fawzy said it is too heavy to be pushed by hand.
That's part of the problem, said Don Elwood, the city's director of transportation engineering and design.
"We wanted to redesign the mall with pedestrians as a priority and to make it as open [and] flexible as possible in the redesign," Elwood said. "A popcorn wagon is a pretty permanent structure."