Until recently, Park Nicollet Methodist Hospital regarded the creek that passes by its southwest side as a nuisance, a barrier, a swamp.
Now, windows frame it, artwork celebrates it, walls curve toward it. Hospital executives love that piece of Minnehaha Creek -- so much so that they're moving it.
This winter, the St. Louis Park hospital will carve out a new, curvier route for the creek. It's one the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District, a partner in the project, says looks more like it once did.
"When this was all farmland out here, the point was to drain off the water as quickly as you could," said Eric Evenson, district administrator. "And to do that, you straightened out all the creeks."
After the restoration project, patients, visitors and staff will be able to follow and cross the creek's new bends on a boardwalk, pausing at rest stations along the way.
The $1.5 million project is an uncommon one: Creeks don't get re-meandered every day. But it's part of a movement in health care.
The effort across the health care industry is to enhance patients' access to natural environments.
Nature helps recovery