The usual lunch rush was nowhere to be found in downtown Minneapolis on Tuesday.
There were no clusters of workers hustling up and down Nicollet Mall during their breaks. No lines stretching outside the chopped salad and roti joints. No crowds mingling or scarfing down food on the benches at the Crystal Court in the IDS Center, the tallest building in the city. Even the benches were gone.
"I think I saw a tumbleweed run through the court," joked Zelda Crist, manager at Lokel Minnesota, a gift shop inside the tower. "It's a bit unnerving."
Like the rest of the state, the heart of Minnesota's largest city is shutting down to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus. Gov. Tim Walz ordered most public spaces to close their doors by 5 p.m. Tuesday; in Minneapolis, Mayor Jacob Frey's directive was noon.
That was well in effect in the busiest part of the city, where more than 50,000 live and 216,000 normally work. People still strolled the sidewalks and skyways, but the activity was reminiscent of a quiet weekend, not a workday.
Restaurant after restaurant inside the IDS Center and across the skyways had paper signs taped to their windows bearing the same message: "Sorry, we're closed." The few that were open closed their eating areas or took orders by the door. Stools and chairs were stacked above tables.
A couple of people sat around the Crystal Court's fountain, the water splashing down from the ceiling. The banks were open but may close by Wednesday, Crist said, which meant the entire building would likely shut down.
Outside under a blue sky, a group of kids skated and biked by the Government Center light-rail stop, attempting tricks along the plaza's ledges. "Amazing Grace," "Happy Birthday" and "Danny Boy" rippled from the bells above City Hall once the clock struck 12.