The Three Rivers Park District, in partnership with Brooklyn Park, is changing the name of Coon Rapids Dam Regional Park to Mississippi Gateway to broaden the park's appeal, differentiate it from the Coon Rapids park on the other side of the river — and rid it of a name that some consider a racist slur.
"We're proud to be the largest, most diverse city in the state," said Brooklyn Park Mayor Jeff Lunde. "So many of our young kids who are from diverse backgrounds, they don't have the historical connection to nature in Minnesota. And so this is really important that we build that."
But more than just a name change is in store for the regional park in Brooklyn Park. A $30 million capital improvement project is planned to add amenities and boost annual visitation to 600,000, making the park more of a metrowide destination. Construction will span several years and depend on securing the remaining funds totaling $8.5 million.
Three Rivers hopes that balance will be part of Gov. Tim Walz's 2020 bonding bill. The park district has never before asked legislators for assistance with a project, said Commissioner Jennifer DeJournett, which she said reflects its scope and importance.
"It elevates this park to the beauty to which it commands and also puts it to the right brand as with all the rest of our Three Rivers parks," she said.
The chance to rebuild a suburban-urban park, she added, rarely comes along: "It's a park that's just so beautiful that it needs an extreme park makeover."
Funding for the makeover is divided among Three Rivers ($13 million), Brooklyn Park ($4.3 million) and the National Park Service ($2.15 million), which operates the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area along the stretch of the river flowing through the Twin Cities. Officials also expect $1.6 million in a federal transportation grant and a $400,000 grant from Hennepin County.
Wilderness in the city
Two versions of Coon Rapids Dam Regional Park have coexisted for years on either side of the Mississippi, one in Coon Rapids run by Anoka County and the other in Brooklyn Park, operated by Three Rivers and the city.