Great cities have great fountains.
They're not essential. Amenities such as beauty and amusement will always rank below essentials such as sanitation and a thriving economy. But a fountain says that life here is more than just the basics.
Now that fountains around the Twin Cities are beginning to ignite one by one, we take a look at some of our best and lament a few that we've lost.
The 'Dandelion' fountain
Ben Berger, a parks commissioner, saw a similar fountain while visiting Sydney, Australia, and decided Minneapolis needed one. He paid for the sculpture with money his theater chain made from showing "The Exorcist," which might explain why the fountain, which was installed in 1975, has seemed a bit cursed over the years. The pipes aged and failed; it spent winters under an ugly wooden box. There are plans to rehabilitate the iconic Minneapolis fountain (aka the Berger fountain). Go to loringpark.org/berger-fountain/ for more info.

The Turtle fountain
Officially known as the Phelps fountain, this is one of the most loved fountains in the Twin Cities, in part because of the turtles that perch on the basin, shooting out streams of water. (Hence its popular name.) It also has the perfect setting — in the Lyndale Park Rose Garden near Lake Harriet.
Originally, the fountain was part of the Gateway Park, a triangular wedge that forded the intersection of Hennepin and Nicollet avenues in downtown. As the Gateway district declined, so did the park. The fountain was moved to its current location in the early 1960s.