Paul Saverinske knows a thing or two about skyways.
Five days a week, he drives a modified golf cart through one of the newest of these flying corridors in Minneapolis, shuttling patients between Abbott Northwestern Hospital and a massive parking garage south of the medical center.
At a length of 823 feet, this bridging skyway that opened last year is nearly the length of three football fields.
But is it the state’s longest?
“This has gotta be one of them,” Saverinske said.
There’s no one source for data on all the skyways in Minnesota. These climate-controlled, elevated walkways — hallmarks of the state’s largest cities and many health care campuses — include what are actually two different architectural features. There are those that pass through building interiors, and then there are flashier flyover bridges, which are suspended on pillars and adjacent structures.
The new skyway segment at Abbott Northwestern is a fancy flyover bridge. It’s comprised of a permanent section, with end-to-end, floor-to-ceiling windows, and a temporary corridor with views of the worksite where Allina Health is building a new surgery and critical care facility.
“We believe this to be the largest we’ve built in Minnesota,” said Mike Labukas, market executive at Mortenson, a Minneapolis-based builder and developer serving as general contractor.