In its fourth growing season, Burnsville's patch of prairie has come into its own.
The vivid tangle of wildflowers and tall grasses looks like a flowering country field on the hillside in front of Burnsville's Civic Campus.
Delighted by the transformation of what used to be an expanse of the turf grass along Nicollet Avenue, some residents have phoned in thank-yous, prompting the city to look for other locations that may be suitable for another patch of prairie. One homeowner was so inspired by the city's planting that she is preparing to seed her own yard with prairie plants.
Native plantings are not new, but municipal interest in them seems to grow every year, said Jake Janski, of Minnesota Native Landscapes Inc., who worked on Burnsville's prairie project.
"Ten years ago when we first got a call from a city, it was kind of surprising," he said.
Since then, roughly 60 percent of metro-area cities — including Bloomington, Cottage Grove and Minneapolis — have put in native plantings on some scale, Janski said. "It really feels like the demand and the desire is increasing significantly year to year now."
Burnsville's hillside has a high concentration of flowers to grasses. At this time of year it's a wall of yellow blossoms.
"Because of the size and location, they were really able to show this one off," Janski said.