Address
300 34th Ave. N
Minneapolis, MN 55411
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Contact
Phone: 612-230-6400
Email: info@minneapolisparks.org
Park Hours
6 am-midnight
Ordinance PB-2-33
Features & Amenities
- Basketball Court
- Drinking Fountain
- Grill
- Picnic Area
- Playground/Tot Lot
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Park Projects
See what’s currently in the works for this park. Some projects may be under the name of the regional park or service area it lives within. View Current Projects
Your NPP20 money at work:
Maintenance is increasing at all neighborhood parks, thanks to additional annual funding from the 20-Year Neighborhood Park Plan (NPP20). This initiative also funds ongoing rehabilitation and major project to restore neighborhood parks and help address racial and economic equity.
Park Details
Rentals & Permits
Outdoor Use and Event Space: Learn how to reserve park space for corporate events, community celebrations, and more.
History
Name: The park’s name comes from the Perkins Hill Addition in which most of the park is located. The name has never been formally adopted.
Acquisition and Development
The five-and-a-half-acre park was acquired in 1948 for $276. All but two lots of the park were acquired from the state at no cost. The two additional lots were purchased. The state had obtained the property through tax forfeiture. Perkins Hill Park along with Bossen Field Park and parts of Peavey, Kenny and McRae parks were acquired in the late 1940s from the state’s list of tax-forfeited property.
The neighborhood had been targeted for a playground by a 1944 study of the city’s park needs. After acquiring the land, the park board promptly vacated 3rd Street through the park and graded the north end of the property for a ball field. The park was intended primarily as a playground for small children. Improvements were completed in 1949 with the installation of backstops for the ball fields and playground equipment and the seeding of the park.
Perkins Hill Park shrank in 1969 when 1.8 acres of the park were taken by the state highway department for the construction of I-94 through north Minneapolis. The state paid $74,000 for the land. Almost $40,000 of that money was put into a fund to improve the park and the remainder was put into a land account to purchase other land for parks in the city.
Plans to renovate the remaining acres of the park were approved in 1970 and commenced that year, with a makeover in 1990-91 and new playground equipment in 2010. Funding from the 20-Year Neighborhood Park Plan supported construction of a pump track (or all-wheel park), which opened in 2022 as the first facility of its kind in the Minneapolis park system. Its circuits of banked turns, mounds and other features can be used by people of all ages and abilities with any type of bike, scooter, skateboard or glider.
Park history through 2008 compiled and written by David C. Smith, with updates from 2009 to present by MPRB.