Is a piece of land a park because a city says so, or because residents make it one?
For Rob Erickson and his Edina neighbors, a three-sided plot of open land near their homes seemed like wasted space. Empty but for a couple of struggling trees and some grass, it screamed for improvement.
Now "Triangle Park," as Erickson calls it, has 15 donated trees and a raised garden bed built by neighbors who filled it with flowers. The land north of W. 70th Street and between Limerick and Hillside lanes is a popular sledding spot in winter, a place for kite-flying in the spring and a make-shift putting green for golfers in summer.
Erickson thinks the lot, just under an acre in size, should be designated a city park, with a sign and maybe a park bench, to prevent it from being sold and developed.
Edina Park and Recreation Director John Keprios praised the neighborhood's efforts but says there are three city parks within half a mile of the site, including Lewis Park, which has 18 acres of ball fields, tennis courts and other amenities.
"If it was the only open space within half a mile, it might make sense," Keprios said. "In my view, this would be duplication of services."
The city has allowed residents to improve the space over the past two years, even parking a city-owned water truck there for a while to help soak the trees residents planted.
Such cooperation appears to be unusual among metro-area cities.