I took a close look at my metro street map that shows park areas along
the Mississippi Corridor, having in mind the comments from both sides of
the Mississippi about the value of river-oriented public recreation land
use as a community-building asset. There certainly is a long gap in
green space on the west descending bank that would be punctuated nicely
by a park at the Riverview site. It's not as if there were no previous
grasp of this riverine potential, both in the text of the area's master
plan and in earlier large-scale examples that give river's edge public
recreation pride of place in the St. Anthony Falls Historic District and
points further downstream. 

This addresses an incomplete vision left over from the 19th century.
Grand rounds parks, the chain of lakes parks, and the Minnehaha Creek
park areas have long advantaged our quality of life and the map shows
many additional parks scattered throughout the city's neighborhoods. But
as often proved the case along many of the nation's waterways in the
1800s and into the 1900s, the Mississippi was seen primarily as an
industrial asset and not as a defining geographic feature on other
cultural grounds. For many decades in Minneapolis, we looked away from
the Mississippi, not wanting to focus on messy industrial uses. For
example, railroad trackage was a significant part of this earlier
arrangement as a preponderance of goods came into the core city via rail
along the river's edge servicing warehouses and factories.

Those times are rapidly passing from view. Much of this activity has
moved to outlying regions. High-end housing has become the replacement
growth industry at river's edge starting at the upper lock and dam and
moving upstream on both ascending banks. 
 
I submit that the 19th century vision that reserved land for public
enjoyment in perpetuity should be revisited in the evolution of the
Upper Corridor's environs - we have been sturdy exponents of this
egalitarian notion in the renewal of the St. Anthony Falls Historic
District and we should continue to promote this enlightened view of the
Mississippi's significance at the Riverview site in particular. It is
simply not all right to let such an anchoring parcel fall into an
exclusionary use of the riverfront. We dodged that bullet on Nicollet
Island and we again have the opportunity at the Riverview site to be
forthright about sharing our life along the Mississippi across our many
constituent communities. 
When the Bicentennial Commission used its entire budget to purchase the
Bicentennial Park at the south tip of Nicollet Island, there were some
short-term financial challenges for the Park Board - but look at that
area now!   My point is that when an entire community turns its
collective attention to the Mississippi River, great things happen.
Generations of citizens are advantaged. 

Completing a 19th century vision by celebrating our extended riverine
community along the entire river corridor complements a similar
largeness of vision in our sister city and suggests to the world that
there is much more to the Twin Cities metro region than the commercial
delights of the Mall of America and other suburban blandishments; that
there is a unique sense of history and culture in our core cities
centered on the original reason for our placement here namely the
Mississippi River, the Father of Waters; and that we recognize this
defining presence in our lives on behalf of all of us - not just a
privileged few.

Fred Markus Horn Terrace Ward Ten

_______________________________________
Minneapolis Issues Forum - A Civil City Civic Discussion - Mn E-Democracy
Post messages to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe, Unsubscribe, Digest option, and more:
http://e-democracy.org/mpls

Reply via email to