Lucky for the crew rebuilding one of the Twin Cities' best-loved music venues, a lot of selfies have been taken in its basement bar over the years.
"It's this one!" operations manager Matt Darnell excitedly yelled out, holding up an odd, old clown painting.
Darnell was able to match the right clown portrait to the right booth in the Turf Club's Clown Lounge, using a cellphone photo from First Avenue marketing director Ashley Ryan, who happened to pose with friends in that very booth before the historic bar was nearly destroyed during last summer's riots.
Such has been the work at the venerable St. Paul watering hole. If Job No. 1 was to make the Turf look a lot like it did before, then it was a job well done. The 1940s-era bar — which became a music mainstay in the 1990s — has been under repair for more than a year but will finally reopen this week, with music starting Wednesday.
Walking up from the basement to the main-floor performance area, First Ave's director of operations Marc Dickhut recounted water flowing down the stairwell the morning last summer when he first walked in to survey the damage.
"It was like a waterfall," he recalled, looking over toward the psychedelically painted walls beside the stairs. "Luckily, it didn't ruin the mural."
The long, vintage wood bar upstairs also survived — even though that's where the trouble started.
As peaceful protests turned to riots along University Avenue three days after the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police, looters broke through one of the club's glassed front doors just after midnight May 28 and started a fire behind the bar. Burn marks still visible in the rafters show how high the flames got.