After working with three mayors over a decade to revitalize Peavey Plaza, Minneapolis City Council Member Lisa Goodman finally got to splash across the central basin of the downtown gathering space on Thursday.
"The vision for the project was making this water feature accessible for everyone," Goodman said after crossing the basin. "I had to walk across the water, mainly because I didn't believe it myself."
The $10 million renovation gave a much-needed makeover to the below-ground plaza, which was built in 1975 next to Orchestra Hall. It had no wheelchair ramps, and its water features were more often dry than wet in the last decade. The city came close to demolishing the plaza in order to start anew, despite the objections of preservationists.
In the end, the city decided to fix what was already there and gathered enough money — including a $2 million state grant and $4 million raised by the Minneapolis Downtown Council and nonprofit Green Minneapolis — to pay for the renovation.
On Thursday, water flowed from cylindrical fountains and cascaded over ledges. Instead of a pond, there is a raised basin, where people can walk or roll across a thin sheet of water.
A ramp off Nicollet Mall allows those with wheelchairs or strollers to access all levels of the plaza.
There are new trees, lighting and, on the southern edge, gender-neutral public bathrooms, which Goodman called her "big dream" for the space.
In front of a crowd gathered by the basin, Mayor Jacob Frey thanked the donors who funded the renovation, calling Thursday "a really proud day for this city."