Neighborhoods of Minneapolis

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The city of Minneapolis, Minnesota is officially divided into several communities, each containing multiple neighborhoods. For example, the area typically referred to by locals as "North Minneapolis" is actually the Near North community, which is composed of the Hawthorne, Jordan, Near North, and Willard-Hay neighborhoods. [1]

Most of the neighborhoods in Minneapolis coordinate certain activities under the Neighborhood Revitalization Program [2]. In some cases, two to four neighborhoods act together under a single neighborhood organization.

Contents

[edit] Street directions

The Hiawatha Light Rail station at 46th Street and Hiawatha Avenue is one of a series of stations that connect neighborhoods in South Minneapolis.
The Hiawatha Light Rail station at 46th Street and Hiawatha Avenue is one of a series of stations that connect neighborhoods in South Minneapolis.

About five different regions can be defined from street directions in the city. Downtown Minneapolis uses south for street names almost exclusively, except for a portion northwest of Hennepin Avenue (which runs southwest-northeast at this point). On the other side of Hennepin is North Minneapolis, which extends north from downtown along the west bank of the Mississippi River (in strict geographic terms, this is the northwest portion of the city). Near downtown, this is often called the Warehouse District.

Northeast Minneapolis and Southeast Minneapolis describe the northern and southern halves of the portion of the East Side of Minneapolis, namely, the portion of the city which lies to the east of the Mississippi River. While Hennepin Avenue forms the official boundary between the two neighborhoods, the entire area of the East Side directly opposite Downtown (including the first few blocks to the south of Hennepin) is commonly considered part of "Nordeast."

South Minneapolis can be considered as basically everything in downtown and south, although common usage is somewhat different. Nicollet Avenue runs straight north-south after it exits downtown, and serves as a dividing line for streets that run east-west. Streets that run north-south in this region are generally named and labeled "Avenue South," and roads that run perpendicular are labeled "East nth" or "West nth" Street (with some exceptions, most notably Lake Street and Lagoon Avenue, which take the place of 30th Street). Much of the western half is said to be Uptown, and the eastern portion also includes Phillips.

[edit] Official neighborhoods

Official Neighborhoods
Armatage [3] Audubon Park [4] Bancroft [5] Beltrami [6]
Bottineau [7] Bryant Bryn Mawr [8] CARAG [9]
Cedar-Isles-Dean [10] Cedar-Riverside Central Cleveland
Columbia Park [11] Como [12] Cooper [13] Corcoran [14]
Diamond Lake [15] Downtown East [16] Downtown West [17] East Calhoun [18]
East Harriet [19] East Isles East Phillips Elliot Park [20]
Field [21] Folwell [22] Fuller Tangletown [23] Fulton [24]
Hale [25] Harrison [26] Hawthorne [27] Hiawatha [28]
Holland Howe [29] Jordan Kenny [30]
Kenwood [31] Kingfield [32] Lind-Bohanon [33] Linden Hills [34] [35]
Logan Park Longfellow [36] Loring Park [37] Lowry Hill
Lowry Hill East [38] Lyndale [39] Lynnhurst [40] Marcy-Holmes [41]
Marshall Terrace McKinley [42] Midtown Phillips Near North [43]
Nicollet Island/East Bank [44] Nokomis East [45] North Loop [46] Northeast Park
Northrop [47] Page [48] Powderhorn Park [49] Prospect Park
Regina [50] Seward [51] Sheridan [52] Shingle Creek
St. Anthony East St. Anthony West [53] Standish-Ericsson [54] Stevens Square [55]
Sumner-Glenwood Ventura Village [56] Victory [57] Waite Park [58]
Webber-Camden [59] West Calhoun West Phillips Whittier [60]
Willard-Hay [61] Windom Windom Park [62]
Camden neighborhood gateway sculpture
Camden neighborhood gateway sculpture[1]

Minneapolis Communities (Consist of 4-13 of the above neighborhoods each)

[edit] Business districts and unofficial regions

Some areas of the city are more commonly known by locally established nicknames, many of which are predominantly business districts. One such place is Dinkytown, near the University. To the southwest of Downtown is Uptown, which is loosely defined as the area around the Uptown Theater near the intersection of Hennepin Avenue and Lake Street, and features a large number of restaurants, bars, and independently owned businesses. A new neighborhood is also being planned for the University of Minnesota region, including the Stadium Village area around the former University Stadium.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ City of Minneapolis (10 January 2005). Minneapolis Neighborhood Gateways. Retrieved on 2007-01-12.

[edit] External links