HELP SAVE OPEN SPACE ON NICOLLET ISLAND
Friends of the Riverfront has filed three lawsuits challenging the plan to build a football stadium on Nicollet Island and the process by which local government has approved it. The first case ended when the Minnesota Supreme Court declined FOR's petition to appeal a ruling by the state Court of Appeals, but two more cases are still pending at the Court of Appeals. Friends of the Riverfront was joined in the first two cases by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and the Preservation Alliance of Minnesota. The three citizen groups are asking that the City of Minneapolis and DeLaSalle be made to comply with state law and explore alternatives before destroying natural or historic resources. Donate to the legal fund online or send a check to Preservation Alliance of Minnesota, 219 Landmark Center, 75 W. Fifth St., St. Paul, MN 55102-1406 (put "Nicollet Island" on the memo line).
Preservation magazine features stadium threat to Nicollet Island
The National Trust for Historic Preservation publication highlights development threats to the St. Anthony Falls Historic District. Click here to read more.
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Page Content
- Heritage Preservation Commission unanimously rejects stadium plan
- Public officials with ties to DeLaSalle push stadium plan
- Park board's new Parade Stadium plan is an alternative
- Trust for Public Land says Minneapolis is tops among densest cities in soccer fields per capita
- Celebrating the Fourth at the Falls dates to city's earliest days
- Hundreds take part in "One River Mississippi"
- More than a million visit Central Riverfront Regional Park
- Thanks for making it a great "River Roots Revue"
- Stadium plan defies constitutions
- Stadium plan ignores public safety, railroad says—despite 50 trains a day
- Closing Grove Street blocks emergency access
- Preservation commission to discuss DeLaSalle stadium plan May 9
- Neighborhood organizations oppose DeLaSalle stadium
- National Park Service says stadium hurts historic district
- You can comment on DeLaSalle stadium's environmental impact!
- Roscoe: EAW should look at island as unique whole
- Trees and park bench victims of vandalism
- DeLaSalle CAC: A predictable outcome
- U of M/Tree Trust forestry experiment at Nicollet Island Park
- CAC tackles DeLaSalle stadium
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Hundreds take part in "One River Mississippi"

Hundreds of people gathered at the Stone Arch Bridge to take part in "One River Mississippi," a site specific dance marking the summer solstice, which this year spread from Central Riverfront Regional Park in Minneapolis to seven other river locations, from Itasca, Minn. to New Orleans.
Friends of the Riverfront's Mission Friends of the Riverfront, a group of concerned citizens and park users, is working to conserve, protect, and enhance the resources of the Central Mississippi Riverfront Regional Park. The park is located in downtown Minneapolis from the Plymouth Avenue bridge to just below the Stone Arch bridge and is part of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area. Within its boundaries is the St. Anthony Falls National Historic District, the birthplace of Minneapolis. The scenic, historical, cultural, natural, and scientific resources within the park are nationally significant.
