Look around and you'll see a nascent trend in Twin Cities economic development -- amphitheaters.
The sloping half-bowls are popping up in a lot of places: New ones opened in September in St. Anthony and White Bear Township. Oakdale added one last spring, and coming this summer are a grand, $2 million structure in Maple Grove and a modest $27,000, 35-seat model in Bunker Hills Regional Park in Coon Rapids.
City officials view them as a way to attract people to downtown businesses and to pull folks together, a destination point. A university professor and former city planner sees the point but offers some alternative views.
"Amphitheaters may be the economic development tool or tourist attraction du jour right now," said David Schultz, a former city planner and professor at Hamline University in St. Paul. Or, he said, building one could be part of a municipal "keeping-up-with-the-Joneses strategy."
The latest amphitheater project was approved last week in Ramsey for the city's half-developed Town Center. The City Council ordered final design plans for a 300-seat, four-tier project to be built next to a pond starting this spring.
"Amphitheaters make it more of a destination," said City Engineer Tim Himmer. "If people are driving by, they might stop to see it or come for a concert."
Three Rivers Park District spent $300,000 to build what you might call an ambidextrous amphitheater in St. Anthony. It can seat about 300 on a grassy knoll, under 150-year-old oaks. But the stage can be turned around so that it faces the Great Lawn, which can seat up to 3,000, said Denis Hahn, the district's outdoor education manager.
"Being embraced by the natural world at the same time you experience the creative performances of people, there is a magic in that," Hahn said. "I think people are drawn to that."