Long cut off from downtown Minneapolis and much of the city by a crisscross of highways, the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood is on the verge of a transformation that will open its sweeping views of downtown and make it easier for bikers and pedestrians to get around.
On the heels of a $100 million-plus update of the colorful Riverside Plaza apartment towers, changes to the neighborhood include adding a second light-rail stop, widening busy Cedar Avenue S. and redirecting 5th Street as a link to downtown.
"Our hope is to get something done in that area as soon as feasible," said Debra Brisk, assistant Hennepin County administrator for public works.
A drive along Cedar now means dodging jaywalkers or braking for an unexpected light that exists solely for pedestrians crossing in front of Nomad World Pub and Palmer's Bar.
Brisk noted that the urban area is one of Hennepin County's most heavily traveled by pedestrians. The neighborhood is home to more than 8,000 people, and thousands more students from the University of Minnesota and Augsburg College pass through it on a daily basis.
Lined with edgy bars, scruffy grocery stores, a landmark outdoor outfitter as well as coffeehouses, bike shops and other businesses, Cedar also serves as a swift passageway for commuters into and out of downtown Minneapolis who catch a quick glimpse of the primary-colored panels of Riverside Plaza.
For four decades, the distinctive buildings, placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010, have served as the first home of immigrants in the neighborhood at the nexus of Interstates 94 and 35W.
On Thursday, Minneapolis learned it had won a state grant of $6.8 million to redirect the S. 5th Street exit off westbound 94 and create a new exit on S. 7th Street. The project isn't expected to start until 2015, but the city hopes to use 5th Street to connect Cedar-Riverside to downtown.