As Edina's new city manager back in 2010, Scott Neal's very first City Council meeting left him wondering "what I was walking into."
The chamber was packed, and many of those attending were frosted. Under debate was a proposal to run a major new regional trail right through what many had always assumed to be strictly their own backyards.
Six years later, after what one top parks official calls a "wild ride," the Nine Mile Creek Regional Trail (see an interactive map) is on its way after a series of involuntary land transactions using the government's eminent domain power.
Jonathan Vlaming, associate superintendent of the Three Rivers Park District, which is overseeing the project, said he was not only impressed with the steadfastness of the City Council in pressing for the most beautiful option vs. lanes along roadways, but also with "a strong movement of Edina residents wanting more trails in their community."
The public hearing, he said, was evenly balanced.
"Is the city of Edina going to have the path stop at its borders, thus making us an island?" asked 68-year resident Steve Sando in one of hundreds of e-mails and letters submitted.
The portion of the trail in east Edina is to be done by 2017. The west portion, out for bid shortly, should be finished by 2018 thanks in part to federal grants that have covered half the $25 million cost.
A striking new land bridge spanning Hwy. 100 north of Interstate 494 is to be joined soon by another swooping over Crosstown Hwy. 62, inviting bikers and hikers to experience little-known but gorgeous Nine Mile Creek as it laces together Edina parks.