All day long, cars speed down Rice Street, tires spraying water up over snowbanks and onto slushy sidewalks. The few pedestrians tempt fate as they wait for rare gaps in traffic and then run across the four lanes.
The county highway runs like a wall through St. Paul's North End, home to some of the city's newest residents, and some of its poorest. Just north of the Capitol, the North End seems merely a place to get through quickly on the way downtown.
Council President Amy Brendmoen, who represents the area and lives in the south Como neighborhood, is working to change all of that, with the support of her council colleagues.
A year ago, Brendmoen launched "10 for the North End," a campaign to spur $10 million of public and private investment in 18 months and make the neighborhood a desirable place for people to open businesses, buy houses and spend their time and money.
Brendmoen marks progress with a drawing of a thermometer on her office wall. It's filled in a little less than halfway, showing $4.4 million worth of planned and completed projects from streetlight banners on Rice Street to new courts at Marydale Park for playing the Southeast Asian sport sepak takraw, also known as kato. The money comes from a number of sources, including the city, the Metropolitan Council, the federal government, the Super Bowl Host Committee and nonprofit grants.
There's more planned for 2018, but it's not yet clear whether Brendmoen will meet the 18-month deadline.
"The truth is, we really wanted to put the North End on the map," she said.
Located at the northern edge of the city in St. Paul's Fifth Ward, the North End begins 2 miles from City Hall and blocks from the State Capitol. Residential streets are lined with modest single-family homes, most built between the 1870s and the 1950s, according to the neighborhood organization.