Tens of thousands of people descended upon downtown Minneapolis over recent weekends for the Olympic gymnastics trials, Pride, Taste of Minnesota and more. But crowds were mostly absent from a stretch of N 1st Avenue that is closed every weekend evening for Warehouse District Live.
Around midnight on a recent Saturday, the area of 1st Avenue N. between 5th and 6th streets that is closed to traffic was quiet aside from a mom and child who shot hoops at an electric basketball game and a handful of people who waited at a Mexican food truck. A DJ played to an empty dance floor. Minneapolis City Council Member Michael Rainville, who spearheaded the event last summer, walked the streets alongside a police officer.
But despite the serene scene and some social media grumblings about low attendance at the late-night downtown Minneapolis event with food trucks, public restrooms, police, music and places to sit, organizers say it has successfully met its objective — curbing crime downtown.
Each Friday and Saturday evening through Halloween weekend, the pedestrian zone is filled with places to eat, play and sit for people enjoying nightlife. The event runs from 7 p.m. to 3 a.m., though it will soon start later at 9 p.m. to match when many people begin to go downtown. The space is generally busiest between 11 p.m. or midnight and 2 a.m., said Adam Duininck, president and CEO of the Downtown Council.
The pedestrian zone is a public safety initiative with a festive atmosphere and resources for people who are already out enjoying downtown nightlife, attending a sports game or going for a drink after a show at First Avenue, Duininck said.
“We are trying to always fine-tune the activities, the games, the fun aspects of what’s happening to make it more marketable. But the purpose of the program itself isn’t to draw people. It’s actually just to be another place along 1st Avenue for people to move through and, frankly, have some resources they can’t get elsewhere,” Duininck said.
Event organizers are not tracking the specific number of people who visit or pass through the area on Fridays and Saturday nights. Instead, they shared Placer.ai cellphone traffic data for the overall downtown entertainment district — the theater and warehouse districts and the North Loop — which showed 1.6 million visits in 2023, a 70% increase in visitors over 2021 that is on par with the 2019 pre-pandemic figure.
The Minneapolis City Council approved the funding proposal for the series of events in March. The council authorized a contract sponsorship of $750,000 for Warehouse District Live, in partnership with the Minneapolis Downtown Improvement District, which operates the event.