Hennepin County Commissioner Mike Opat wants to build a curved promenade of nearly a mile that would span the Mississippi River and put pedestrians just above the dam leading to the St. Anthony Falls spillway.
The proposed "Wishbone" would be the splashiest new development concept for the Mississippi riverfront in downtown Minneapolis in recent history.
"Great cities have great public spaces," said Opat, who envisions the project as something like New York City's High Line, the popular 1.45-mile elevated linear park along a former rail line on the west side of Manhattan.
Opat will make present the idea to the public Tuesday, along with the "very preliminary" cost estimate of $50 million to $100 million. He said that Hennepin County would be a partner, and not necessarily the lead, on the project.
It's a complicated project, but Opat has shepherded large, controversial projects before. He put together the financing that got the Minnesota Twins into a new ballpark, Target Field, in 2010.
Though this project would be less expensive, it would be trickier because of the extensive number of public and private groups with an interest in the river. As Opat put it: "Nobody owns it and everybody owns it."
Besides the city and the county, there would be federal agencies, environmentalists and Xcel Energy, which runs a nearby power plant. And that's just for starters.
The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board likely would play a major role in reaching out to the public and leading discussions about it. Michael Schroeder, assistant superintendent of planning for the board, said Wishbone is "not inconsistent with our plans for the riverfront or the river in general."