A 4.5-mile bike trail slices through north and northeast Minneapolis, starting at Theodore Wirth Parkway in the west and ending at the foot of the Washburn-McReavy Hillside Cemetery. It’s a smooth ride, with trail lighting and an asphalt surface that is plowed in the winter. But there’s one gaping 600-foot obstacle right in the middle that snips the trail in two — the Mississippi River.
Minneapolis Park Board explores building new bridge spanning the Mississippi River for the first time in 50 years
Cyclists and park advocates have long pushed for a bridge to connect the north and northeast Minneapolis sections of the Great Northern Greenway trail.
Cyclists, park boosters and others who have yearned for greater human connection to the industrialized Mississippi riverfront have long advocated for knitting together the two segments of the Great Northern Greenway trail. Now that idea is a step closer to reality.
A recent feasibility study by the Minneapolis Park Board shows a new bridge can be done, and that ideally it would span the new 26th Avenue Overlook in north Minneapolis and a vacant building that the Park Board owns at 1720 Marshall St. NE., next to Broken Clock Brewing Cooperative.
“For us that live in northeast and north Minneapolis, the river is the largest body of water,” said northeast resident and bridge advocate Dan Miller, who biked to the 26th Ave. N. Overlook on Saturday for a site tour hosted by the Park Board. “So being able to connect with the nature that is around the river is just really important.”
“We’ve been waiting for this for a long time,” said North Side resident Georgianna Yantos at a recent town hall for the project at Broken Clock. “We’ve always wanted to be able to connect north and northeast. We don’t want to be isolated.”
The Lowry Avenue Bridge, completed in 2012, is the latest Mississippi River bridge to be reconstructed in the footprint of a preexisting bridge.
The last time a new corridor was built across the Mississippi was in 1977, according to the feasibility study. That was the year the Camden Bridge was built, linking Webber Parkway in north Minneapolis to St. Anthony Parkway in northeast, completing a segment of the Grand Rounds Scenic Byway.
For years, the Park Board considered the possibility of converting the nearby Burlington Northern Santa Fe bridge, located about 500 feet away from the Overlook, into a structure that could accommodate a recreational trail. But that bridge is still used to transport cement from north Minneapolis’ riverfront industries, and BNSF isn’t willing to risk having pedestrians and cyclists share its freight line.
Now that the Park Board has determined that building a new bridge is feasible, staff will begin designing concepts, engaging with north and northeast Minneapolis residents and seeking approval from other regulatory agencies including the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Coast Guard, Minnesota Department of Transportation and the city of Minneapolis — a process that could take four years if fundraising goes smoothly.
The Park Board will have to raise a lot of money. Without more design details it’s hard to anticipate how much, but project manager Tyler Pederson estimates a target cost of $30 million for the bridge, not counting park improvements on both ends.
Pederson said residents have had high aspirations for a Great Northern Greenway river crossing for some 20 years.
“It’s actually really pretty rare that we have such a popular project, where there just doesn’t seem to be a lot of opposition,” he said. “That may change especially when people start seeing the the dollars come out and how expensive it might be ... but it is definitely a pleasure to work on such a fun project.”
The bridge will need to compete internally with the Park Board’s other major state bonding asks, including the North Commons neighborhood park reconstruction, the Grand Rounds Missing Link, the second phase of the downtown Water Works park and Minneapolis creek habitat restoration. And if it makes it to the Legislature, it will be up against funding requests for capital projects across the state.
These Minnesotans are poised to play prominent roles in state and national politics in the coming years.