Author: Mark Weber

Mark Weber

Mark joined the Eden Prairie News as a reporter in 1979, just five years after its start, and spent the next 34 years in various roles including editor and publisher, as well as general manager of the parent company, Southwest Newspapers. He also published Edible Twin Cities magazine. His encore career was serving the nonprofit Eden Prairie Community Foundation as executive director. Mark is now retired. He and his wife, Roma, have two grown sons and a daughter-in-law, as well as a grandson. They have lived in Eden Prairie since 1984. "I hope the many words I have typed over the years have helped people understand the world around them."

Advertisement
Ad for Southwest Transit - MSP Airport Curb to Curb Servce
Advertisement
Ad for EPLN Email Newsletter

The SouthWest Transit Commission announced in a news release this week that its longtime chief executive officer, Len Simich, will retire by the end of the first quarter 2022. Simich had informed the commission of his retirement plans last spring, and in October the commission contracted with the national placement firm KL2 Connects to begin the search for Simich’s replacement. SouthWest Transit is the public transit agency for Eden Prairie, Chanhassen, Chaska, and Carver, and Simich has been at its helm since 1997. During his tenure, he helped grow the agency’s ridership by more than 400 percent, built four structured…

Read More

Remodeling of the Eden Prairie Senior Center’s upper level is among the items on the Eden Prairie City Council’s meeting agenda for Tuesday, Nov. 16. The proposed remodeling will create more open, usable space in the upper level of the Senior Center at 8950 Eden Prairie Road, which once served as city hall and was carved into multiple offices and rooms. It will also improve the front-desk area of the center, which is seeing increased usage. City staff is recommending approval of a contractor’s base bid of $89,867 plus an allowance of up to $14,040 for a stone fireplace they…

Read More

Plans to build another large apartment complex along Eden Prairie Road near Smith Coffee & Café cleared a hurdle Monday, Nov. 8, with approval from the Eden Prairie Planning Commission. Next is a review by the Eden Prairie City Council. Endorsed 8-1 on Monday was a United Properties plan to build a 239-unit apartment complex on Lincoln Lane, replacing seven older single-family homes there. The four-story building immediately north of Smith Coffee & Café would be called The Ellie after Elizabeth Fries Ellet, the East Coast writer credited with giving Eden Prairie its name after visiting the area and calling…

Read More

Rarely is a prominent office building demolished to create green space, but that’s exactly what is planned for a portion of the Shutterfly campus, formerly Lifetouch, along Interstate Highway 494 in Eden Prairie. Shutterfly is proposing to demolish the western-most building of its two-building campus north of I-494, along Viking Drive, and leave the area open and green for its employees to enjoy. It’s an idea that requires city approval, and was unanimously endorsed Monday, Nov. 8, by the Eden Prairie Planning Commission. The proposal now heads to the city council. Architect Terry Helland, speaking on behalf of Shutterfly, said…

Read More

A system of driverless cars that help get Eden Prairie workers from transit stations to their companies’ front doors, and back again, might be 5-10 years away. But, SouthWest Transit and City of Eden Prairie officials are working now to make sure EP is first in line when it’s time for a federal- and state-funded pilot project. They are encouraged by the possibility that they have the perfect proving grounds: The “Golden Triangle” area of northeastern Eden Prairie, bounded by Highway 169 on the east, Highway 212 on the west, and Interstate 494 on the south. It’s home to nearly…

Read More

Plans for a 40,000-square-foot grocery store whose owner is being kept secret were unanimously approved Tuesday, Oct. 27, by the Eden Prairie City Council. While the schematic drawings for what’s being called “Flying Cloud Commons Grocery Store” show a building façade similar to those used for new Amazon Fresh grocery stores across the country, the developer on Tuesday said a non-disclosure agreement prevented him from identifying the tenant. Toronto-based NORR, listed as architect for the Eden Prairie project, has been linked to other Amazon Fresh projects nationwide. But the store’s name is being withheld – even to city officials, at…

Read More

Book lovers, computer users, and others who use the Eden Prairie Library will get an additional 20 hours a week to access library services beginning Oct. 24. The expanded schedule of open hours means additional access most evenings and on Friday when the Eden Prairie Library is currently closed. With the new schedule, the library will be open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays instead of closing at 5 p.m. The new Friday hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Unchanged are hours for Saturdays, 9-to-5, and Sundays, noon-to-5. The expanded hours extend to…

Read More

If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck … does that make it a duck? Plans for a 40,000-square-foot grocery store whose owner is being kept secret were recommended for approval Monday, Sept. 27, by the Eden Prairie Planning Commission. The schematic drawings for what’s being called “Flying Cloud Commons Grocery Store” show a building façade similar to those used for Amazon Fresh grocery stores; the developer on Monday noted that its client is a national grocer; and Toronto-based NORR, listed as architect for the Eden Prairie project, has been linked to other…

Read More

Opponents of the proposed Noble Hill housing development near Eden Prairie’s Fredrick-Miller Spring have filed a lawsuit against the Riley Purgatory Bluff Creek Watershed District, alleging that the district’s Aug. 12 approval of permits for the project ignored warnings that erosion and water pollution might result. In a prepared statement, the Spring Valley Friends group that has formed to oppose the 50-lot project said the watershed district should have given more weight to concerns by University of Minnesota civil engineer professor Otto Strack about whether the plan’s water infiltration and retention ponds – designed to hold runoff and prevent pollution…

Read More

Do you see them? Eden Prairie residents who might be other than white, who eat foods different than yours, who celebrate different cultures, but who contribute to our Eden Prairie schools and community: Do you really see them? Artist Cadex Herrera wants them seen, wants their stories known, wants their contributions recognized and acknowledged. And, so he used those underlying themes to create his First Person Plural (We) art installation at Purgatory Creek Park: seven huge portraits of Eden Prairie residents that you see along Technology Drive as you drive west to east. All of those who are portrayed on…

Read More