Where Minnehaha Creek snakes through the west metro suburbs, a mission to mend the strained relationship between the water and the cities that crowd its banks has reached its final phase.
Construction has begun on the capstone of a 15-year series of multimillion-dollar projects by the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District to restore one of the creek's most populous —and polluted — stretches. The water already is significantly cleaner as it flows past Hopkins and St. Louis Park. Soon efforts will focus eastward in Minneapolis – with the goal of getting Lake Hiawatha delisted from the state index of impaired waters.
Past development treated Minnehaha Creek like a glorified drainage ditch, paring its curves and paving its floodplain. The result: Water moving so fast down the creek's artificially straightened channel that it eroded the banks, swamped nearby properties and loaded the lakes of south Minneapolis with nutrients making them increasingly unsuitable for swimming.
To counter the damage, the watershed district has spent millions of dollars to engineer bends back into the creek, build parks and nature preserves, protect a nearby hospital from flooding and convert an eyesore of a warehouse into a colossal housing development that doubles as a regional storm water treatment center.
Each project was designed with water management as the central element around which local governments and developers assembled their plans. In the process, officials say, they also improved blighted corridors, increased housing and even reduced crime.
"When water is meaningfully integrated into land-use decision making, we can realize sustainable benefits that don't just improve the environment but contribute to community and contribute to the economy," said James Wisker, administrator for the watershed district.
Man-made problems
Minnehaha Creek commands a 178-square-mile urban watershed that covers 29 cities and townships in Hennepin and Carver counties, encompassing some of the wealthiest communities in Minnesota. It connects streams, wetlands and more than 100 lakes, including Minneapolis' iconic Chain of Lakes and Minnehaha Falls.