The suburbs were built with young families in mind. Now, as their populations age, dealing with death has become a new reality.
For a growing number of cities, that means creating space to lay to rest those who have lived and now died there.
Jeralyn Blomquist died at age 65 last fall in the Shoreview home she and her husband, Henry, bought as young newlyweds more than 40 years ago. Her ashes will be placed in a prayer garden and cemetery to be built at St. Odilia Catholic Church. It will be the first cemetery in the Ramsey County city, and a rarity in the metro's suburbs.
Officials with the Minnesota Association of Cemeteries say they cannot recall the last time a full-service cemetery was created in the Twin Cities. But suburbs are finding ways to accommodate families, like the Blomquists, who wish for loved ones' remains to be near by.
Several churches are adding columbaria, usually aboveground structures made of stone to house cremated remains. This comes as the percentage of cremations in Minnesota has more than doubled in the past 20 years to around 50 percent. In the Twin Cities, that rate is closer to 60 percent.
Calvary Lutheran Church in Golden Valley has built two columbaria, and All Saints Lutheran in Cottage Grove has one. Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Roseville and King of Kings Lutheran Church in Woodbury will both start building one this year.
Other suburbs, including Apple Valley and Chanhassen, have taken over existing cemeteries and created additional room. At Pioneer Cemetery in Chanhassen, the city is clearing unused land on the cemetery grounds to add 324 grave sites and will build a columbarium.
Mayor Tom Furlong said the expansion is driven by steady demand. "We have lifelong residents of Chanhassen. It is their home," Furlong said. "This is home, so people are interested in being buried where they live and where they raised their families."