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Lyndale Avenue

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lyndale Avenue
Maintained byMnDOT and Hennepin County DOT
South end I-35 in Faribault
Major
junctions

North end57th Avenue North in Brooklyn Center

Lyndale Avenue is a major street in the U.S. state of Minnesota that traverses the cities of Minneapolis, Brooklyn Center, Richfield, and Bloomington. A noncontiguous portion also exists in Faribault, part of Highway 21. There are several commercial districts along the street, including Lyn-Lake in South Minneapolis, Shops at Lyndale in Richfield, and the Oxboro area in Bloomington. Portions of both Interstate 94 and Interstate 35 run on the right-of-way of Lyndale Avenue.

Route description[edit]

Lyndale Avenue at the Lowry Hill neighborhood in Minneapolis, August 2018

In Faribault, Lyndale Avenue is a divided four-lane highway with a 45 mph speed limit. Between Faribault and the Minnesota River, Lyndale Avenue has been replaced by Interstate 35. North of the river, the old Lyndale Avenue resumes in Bloomington. At the south edge of Bloomington, it is a 2-lane road, until 106th Street West. Through most of Bloomington and Richfield, it is an undivided four-lane city street. There are major commercial districts at 98th Street, American Boulevard, 77th Street (Kensington Park and Shops at Lyndale), and 66th Street (Woodlake Center).

Shortly after entering Minneapolis, the street becomes a one-way, to connect with Minnesota State Highway 121, a freeway spur connecting Lyndale Ave and Interstate 35W. After their junction at 56th Street West, the road becomes a divided two-lane roadway across Minnehaha Creek and north toward Uptown. Near the intersection with Lake Street, it becomes a four-lane again, a major commercial street which remains continuous until the Virginia Triangle (the commons with Hennepin Avenue).[1] After the Triangle, Lyndale Avenue splits, with matching one-ways on either side of Interstate 94. They join at Plymouth Avenue. The street remains four lanes until Broadway. The two-lane road ends at 57th Avenue North in Brooklyn Center, near the junction of I-94 and Interstate 694.

History[edit]

The street was historically a rural route from Minneapolis to Faribault, though most of that route has since been replaced by Interstate 35 and I-35W. The Lyndale Avenue name is not signed on these routes. From 1926 to 1934, U.S. Highway 65 traveled concurrently along Lyndale from the Minnesota–Iowa state line to Minneapolis and St.Paul via Northfield, where the road split to its various directions, later rejoining north of the downtowns and continuing north towards Littlefork.[2] Again, the route was not always known as Lyndale Avenue, however. This route also ran through the south metro cities of Lakeville, Burnsville, Bloomington, Richfield and along the east shoreline of Wood Lake before continuing into Minneapolis. The modern portions of Lyndale Avenue is designated as County Road 22 (in Minneapolis) and Minnesota State Highway 21 (in Faribault). Prior to the portion south of Minneapolis being upgraded to a freeway, it was also part of Minnesota State Highway 65.[3] In addition, there is a brief location north of Interstate 35W where a short highway is signed as Minnesota State Highway 121, which follows the old US 65 route into south Minneapolis.

Lyndale Avenue takes its name from Lyndale Farm, a 1,400-acre (570 ha) farm owned by William S. King. The name of the farm was in honor of King's father, Rev. Lyndon King, an itinerant Methodist minister of northern New York, who was named for Josiah Lyndon, colonial governor of Rhode Island in 1768-1769.[4]

Safety[edit]

Lyndale Ave looking south just south of Franklin Ave. Guerrilla urbanists vandalized a street sign to reduce the posted speed limit in 2016.

The portion of Lyndale Ave between Franklin Ave and Lake Street is known for a high rate of crashes and injuries. The street segment was identified as part of the "High Injury Network" by the city of Minneapolis.[5] The intersection of Lyndale Ave and Lake Street is particularly dangerous with the highest number of pedestrian crashes in Minneapolis over a ten year period.[6] A large portion of the crashes happen at night.[7]

A pilot project in 2022 used a road diet to change the road from 2 lanes in each direction to 1 lane in each direction and a center turn lane. The pilot saw crashes reduced by 57%.[8] Select intersections also saw safety improvements designed for pedestrians.[9] Hennepin County is the roadway authority for the segment between Franklin Ave and Lake Street and plans to reconstruct the road in 2027.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Harris, Marlys (22 June 2012). "Conflicted over Trader Joe's in Minneapolis". MinnPost. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  2. ^ "Historic U.S. Highway 65, Minnesota".
  3. ^ Politics and Freeways: Building the Twin Cities Interstate System Archived 2014-02-07 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Lyndale - City of Minneapolis".
  5. ^ Otárola, Miguel (February 25, 2020). "Fight to make Minneapolis streets safer revolves around Lyndale Avenue". Star Tribune. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  6. ^ a b Hoffman, Melody (May 28, 2024). "Dueling Visions for Lyndale Avenue Before Reconstruction Plan is Announced". www.southwestvoices.news. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  7. ^ "Minneapolis/Hennepin County Pedestrian Crossing Study" (PDF). Minneapolis, Hennepin County, SRF Consulting. October 15, 2019. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  8. ^ Potter, Josh (June 13, 2023). "Lyndale Avenue South safety improvements - 4- to 3-Lane Pilot Project". Hennepin County. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  9. ^ Brown, Kyle (31 August 2023). "Plans underway to make Lyndale Avenue South safer for pedestrians". KSTP.com 5 Eyewitness News. Retrieved 6 June 2024.