Minneapolis may have the best parks in the country, but the city still sees plenty of room for improvement.
In a recent measure by the Trust for Public Land, the city's park system got a perfect 5.0 score, the highest in the nation for the second straight year among the 60 largest U.S. cities. The trust looked at median park size, the percentage of land dedicated to parks, per capita spending, how many residents could reach a park within a 10-minute walk and the number of playgrounds available per 10,000 city residents.
But the city's Park and Recreation Board wants to go beyond those measures to better meet the needs of underserved residents.
One of those groups is the disabled. The board teamed up with Peggy Halvorson, an activist with People for Parks, to create the first universally accessible playground in the city.
People for Parks and the Park Board raised nearly $1 million to build the playground, located in the Wabun picnic area at Minnehaha Park. It will open in early July. A campground-themed jungle gym, a quiet sensory area and sand pit can all be accessed by a wheelchair and are safe for those with walkers or canes.
"This will allow both the child or the parent to be able to use the full playground in the way that they can't in other parks," Park Board Superintendent Jayne Miller said.
Halvorson, who lives in Edina but uses Minneapolis parks, does not have any disabled family members. Her passion for the playground arose after she noted that kids and parents with disabilities could not fully participate at city playgrounds.
"The more I read about inclusiveness, the more wrong it seemed that kids would watch their siblings and couldn't participate," she said.