Bryn Mawr Meadows Park Improvements Park and field improvements at Bryn Mawr Meadows Park in cooperation with the City of Minneapolis and the Bassett's Creek Watershed Management Commission
Project Location
Location MapProject Manager
Tyler Pederson
Phone: 612-499-9084
Email: tpederson@minneapolisparks.org
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Language Resources
Correo Electrónico: preguntas@minneapolisparks.org
Email: suaalo@minneapolisparks.org
Key Documents
Status
Current Phase: Construction warranty and establishment period
Construction Timeframe: Late Summer/Fall 2022 through Summer 2023
Nearby Partnering Projects
- Irving Avenue Sanitary Sewer (City)
- Bryn Mawr Meadows Water Quality Improvement Project (BCWMC)
- SW LRT – Bassett Creek Valley Station (Met Council)
- SW LRT – Bryn Mawr Station (Met Council)
What's New
More meadow, less lawn! Oct. 24 ribbon-cutting & tour at the redesigned Bryn Mawr Meadows Park
From bird watchers to ball players, the redesigned Bryn Mawr Meadows Park strikes a sustainable balance between nature and recreation. Highlights of the 56-acre park include a native landscape greenway and meadow […]
Planned bike facilities coming to Bryn Mawr Meadows Park and Theodore Wirth Park
The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) has begun construction of new natural surface trails at two locations: Skills Park at Bryn Mawr Meadows Park Catering to beginners and more […]
Construction Project at Bryn Mawr Meadows Park Almost Complete
The contractors will be working through September to install the plantings, grow the ballfield grass, complete the install of the play area equipment, and create a new bike skills area. […]
Timeline
Project Milestones
Q1 2021 – Pre-planning and Community Engagement and Consultant Selection
Q2 2021 – Community Engagement Begins
Q3 2021 – Concept Development
Q4 2021 – Design and Engineering
Q2/3 2022 – Bidding and Permitting
Q3/4 2022 – Construction Starts
Q1 2023 – Construction Substantially Complete
Q2/3 2023 – Field Turf Grow-in Complete
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Upcoming Meetings
There are no upcoming meetings scheduled at this time.
Background
History
Name: The neighborhood and the park named Bryn Mawr take their names from John Oswald’s farm that once occupied that region of the city. Bryn Mawr means “great hill” in Welsh. As early as the 1860s, Oswald grew tobacco on his farm and also produced fruit wines there, which led eventually to Oswald establishing the first wholesale wine and liquor business in Minneapolis. Oswald was a commissioner on the first park board created by the legislature in 1883. The name was officially adopted May 11, 1911.
Acquisition and Development: John Oswald’s son-in-law and business partner, Theophil Basting, offered to sell part of Oswald’s estate to the park board in 1910. Theodore Wirth’s assessment of the property at the time was that it did not offer any “special advantage” except as part of a parkway to connect The Parade and Loring Park to Glenwood (Wirth) Park through Bassett’s Creek Valley. Even then, Wirth reported in 1910 that compared with other needs in the park system it was of “little importance.” The 45 acres originally offered to the park board was appraised at $81,203 in late 1910, a sum the park board was not inclined to pay. For the 39 acres eventually acquired in early 1911, the park board paid only $32,000.
The land left out of the purchase was the far western end that would have connected Bryn Mawr to Glenwood Park, which meant the park board bought the land without a connection to Glenwood—and therefore no Valley Drive. Perhaps the park board was convinced to acquire the land when Bastil and other residents said they would not ask for any improvements on the land. The cost of the purchase was assessed on property in the neighborhood.
The first suggestions for improvement of the land, nonetheless, were made in 1915 when Wirth recommended converting the land into an equestrian center, complete with horse-riding park and polo grounds. The plan was never pursued despite being presented again by Wirth in 1924. At that time he recommended a neighborhood and city-wide assessment to pay for the development. The park board did approve a baseball field for Bryn Mawr, at a cost of $3,000, in 1922, but never approved the equestrian center.
Bryn Mawr was targeted for a neighborhood playground in a 1928 report produced by Wirth. A year later Wirth presented a plan to improve the 39 acres of “almost useless” land. The plan included the improvement of Bassett’s Creek from Glenwood to Bryn Mawr. Sixty acres of land along Bassett’s Creek from Bryn Mawr to Glenwood (Wirth) Park was acquired in 1934 for $14,000. Included in that acquisition were about 14 acres donated by the Glenwood-Inglewood Company and Arthur Fruen, a city council member and ex-officio park commissioner 1929-1933. (See Bassett’s Creek Park).
The first building constructed at Bryn Mawr was a combined toilet building and storage shed to serve the athletic fields in 1953. In addition, about 7,000 yards of clay were removed from the playing field areas and replaced with a good grade of back fill. A small part of Bryn Mawr was lost to freeway construction in 1966, but freeways ultimately resulted in the enlargement of the park. Seven athletic fields at The Parade were lost due to freeway expansion and the park board replaced some of that loss by expanding Bryn Mawr and building more playing fields there.
Important renovations were made to Bryn Mawr’s playing fields in 1992. Bryn Mawr was connected to the Luce Line bicycle trail in 2005, which connected paths from Wirth Park with the Cedar Lake Trail and links to downtown Minneapolis.
Park history compiled and written by David C. Smith.
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