Danny and Sophie Strauss met as kids at a summer camp in Ely where they were introduced to Finnish sauna culture, plunging into an icy lake after sweating in a 1930s wood-fired sauna.
Now, as Minnesota has become the epicenter of a growing sauna revival, the Denver couple decided to try to re-create Camp du Nord’s North Woods sauna experience in the Twin Cities. This winter, they set up 10 saunas along the shores of Lake Minnewashta in Excelsior for their Sauna Camp.
“It’s taken off,” said Danny Strauss, 32, who left a corporate career to launch the initiative with his wife, 29, who owns a video production company. “Being outside, no phones, in a sauna feeling good, doing something hard and challenging together, it’s all just an environment that’s ... really conducive to connecting and letting go.”
The thermal movement has heated up across Minnesota, tapping into the growing emphasis on wellness. Since 612 Sauna, a Minneapolis co-op, started in 2016, new saunas have opened up from Grand Marais to Golden Valley, offering everything from floating Lake Superior saunas to an urban pop-up sauna village.
There are more than 20 sauna (pronounced SOW-nah) businesses across the state by so-called “sauna-preneurs” who sell saunas, offer deliveries for pop-up backyard saunas or host public reservations. Not all efforts have survived; one homeowner’s backyard sauna in Golden Valley closed last fall because of city code.
Sauna culture in Minnesota has gradually gone from fringe to mainstream in the three decades that Glenn Auerbach, 60, of Minneapolis has been sweating in saunas, starting in his own backyard before writing a book and founding the online Sauna Times. He’s watched as stuffy, windowless gym saunas have given way to scenic cedar saunas with Instagrammable views and high-quality stoves.
“We’ve come to a tipping point,” he said. “And that’s a remarkable change. It’s nice that Minnesota … is the origin, much like you could say the Northwest is for great brewing. They make great hops out there and we make great heat here.”
John Pederson, who founded 612 Sauna, said that post-pandemic, people are craving social interactions, joining communal sauna sessions (swimsuits required) to connect with one another over the therapeutic heat followed by a dip in a cold tub or lake. For people who can’t afford to install a sauna, the public sessions provide easy access to the ancient tradition.