Big dreams for the reconstruction of the Hennepin-Lyndale bottleneck are giving way to lowered expectations.
The preliminary designs unveiled at a public open house last month provoked some residents and transit advocates to protest that the new intersection will not be much better than the current one.
Now community members are scaling back their vision of the area as the gem of the city.
"It should be a stately, beautiful boulevard," said Craig Wilson, a Minneapolis sustainability consultant and former president of the Lowry Hill Neighborhood Association. "It should be our Champs-Élysées, and it's anything but that."
The $9.1 million project, funded largely by a $7.3 million federal grant, would reconstruct pavement, curbs, gutters, pedestrian ramps, striping, lighting and storm sewers, update pedestrian and bicycle crossways and rebuild traffic signals. Construction will likely begin next year.
City officials say the reconstruction is an opportunity to revamp the intersection based on what stakeholders want, but some community members say their voices haven't been heard.
More than 150 people attended the first of three community meetings on the project March 25.
"I went to the open house, and I didn't really feel like they were making an effort to reach out to people or gather input before that meeting, or even after," said Anton Schieffer, who blogs for the transit website Streets.mn.