More than two dozen Brooklyn Park homes could fall to the wrecking ball and nearly 100 property owners might lose land for a road expansion and, ultimately, a light-rail line in the north metro.
Every landowner along a two-mile stretch would be affected under a Hennepin County plan to widen W. Broadway and create space for the Bottineau LRT, which would run from Minneapolis to Brooklyn Park.
Proponents, including Brooklyn Park's mayor, say it's the price of progress that will benefit the city for decades. Opponents contend there are other options and they find it galling that an affluent Minneapolis neighborhood could get $160 million in tunnels to hide the Southwest light-rail line while Brooklyn Park gets bulldozers and surface tracks.
"Brooklyn Park homeowners — most of whom are low- or middle-income families, a lot of single parents and seniors — get forced from their properties," said City Council Member John Jordan. "What did my residents do to the Met Council and our county commissioner to deserve to be so disrespected?"
The Twin Cities bought into light-rail transit a decade ago, shoehorning the Hiawatha/Blue Line and the soon-to-open Central Corridor/Green Line into dense urban cores. So far, planners have largely avoided taking out homes by using existing rail corridors, medians and rights of way. One home and three businesses were razed and 22 other private property owners lost part of their land for the Hiawatha line, which opened in 2004. Two vacant buildings and slivers of about 60 commercial properties, but no homes, were taken for the Central line.
Plans for the Southwest line, which would run from Minneapolis to Eden Prairie, also avoid bulldozing single-family homes.
But a spokeswoman for the Met Council, the regional planning agency, said that line and Bottineau can't be compared.
"Southwest and Bottineau are separate and distinct projects and are at very different stages of the development process," Meredith Vadis said. "However, both projects will create jobs and make considerable investments in the many neighborhoods along each line."