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Minneapolis–Saint Paul

Coordinates: 44°57′N 93°12′W / 44.950°N 93.200°W / 44.950; -93.200

Minneapolis–Saint Paul is a metropolitan area in the Upper Midwestern United States centered around the confluence of the Mississippi, Minnesota and St. Croix rivers in the U.S. state of Minnesota. It is commonly known as the Twin Cities after the area's two largest cities, Minneapolis and Saint Paul. Minnesotans often refer to the two together (or the seven-county metro area collectively) simply as "the cities". It is Minnesota's economic, cultural, and political center.

Minneapolis–Saint Paul
  • Minneapolis–St. Paul–Bloomington, MN–WI
  • Metropolitan area
CountryUnited States
StatesMinnesota and Wisconsin
Principal citiesMinneapolis, Saint Paul
Area
 • Urban
1,021.8 sq mi (2,646 km2)
 • Metro
8,120 sq mi (21,000 km2)
Highest elevation
1,376 ft (419 m)
Lowest elevation
660 ft (200 m)
Population
 (2020[1])
 • Density2,594.3/sq mi (1,001.7/km2)
 • Urban
2,650,890 (16th)
 • MSA
3,690,261 (16th)
 • CSA
4,078,788 (16th)
 
  • MSA/CSA: 2020
  • Urban: 2018
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (CDT)
Area code(s)320, 507, 612, 651, 715/534, 763, 952

Minneapolis and Saint Paul are independent municipalities with defined borders. Minneapolis sits mostly on the west side of the Mississippi River on lake-covered terrain. Although most of the city is residential neighborhoods, it has a business-dominated downtown area with some historic industrial areas, the Mill District and the North Loop area. Saint Paul, which sits mostly on the east side of the river, has a smaller business district, many tree-lined neighborhoods, and a large collection of late-Victorian architecture. Both cities, and the surrounding smaller cities, are known for their lakes, hills and creeks.

Originally inhabited by the Ojibwe and Dakota people, the cities were settled by various Europeans. Minneapolis was strongly influenced by early Scandinavian and Lutheran settlers, while Saint Paul was settled predominantly by the French, the Irish, and German Catholics. Today, both urban areas are home to new immigrant communities, including Somalis, Hmong, Oromo, Cameroonians, and Liberians.

"Twin Cities" is sometimes used to refer to the seven-county region governed by the Metropolitan Council regional governmental agency and planning organization. The United States Office of Management and Budget officially designates 15 counties as the "Minneapolis–St. Paul–Bloomington MN–WI Metropolitan Statistical Area". It is the 16th-largest metropolitan statistical area and third-largest metropolitan area in the Midwest, with a population of 3,690,261 at the 2020 census. The larger 21-county Minneapolis–St. Paul MN–WI Combined Statistical Area, which also ranks as the 16th-largest, had a population of 4,078,788 at the 2020 census.

History

European settlement

The first European settlement in the region was near what is now the town of Stillwater, Minnesota, about 20 miles (30 km) from downtown Saint Paul and on the western bank of the St. Croix River, which forms the border of central Minnesota and Wisconsin. Another settlement that fueled early interest in the area was the outpost at Fort Snelling, which was constructed from 1820 to 1825 at the confluence of the Minnesota River and the Mississippi River.[2]

The Fort Snelling military reservation bordered both sides of the river up to Saint Anthony Falls. The town of Saint Anthony grew just outside the reservation on the river's east side. For several years, the only European resident to live on the west bank of the river was Colonel John H. Stevens, who operated a ferry service across the river. When the military reservation was reduced in size, settlers quickly moved to the land, creating the new village of Minneapolis. The town grew, with Minneapolis and Saint Anthony eventually merging.[3] On the eastern side of the Mississippi, a few villages such as Pig's Eye and Lambert's Landing grew to become Saint Paul.[4]

 
St. Paul, showing barges on the Mississippi River, the Capitol dome, and Minneapolis's skyline in the far background (right of St. Paul). In the lower right is a typical nineteenth century home. Taken from Indian Mounds Park.

Nature

Natural geography played a role in the two cities' settlement and development. The Mississippi River Valley in the area is defined by a series of stone bluffs that line the river. Saint Paul grew up around Lambert's Landing, the last place to unload boats coming upriver at an easily accessible point, seven miles (11 km) downstream from Saint Anthony Falls, the geographic feature that, due to the value of its immense water power for industry, defined Minneapolis's location and its prominence as the Mill City. The falls can be seen from the Mill City Museum, housed in the former Washburn "A" Mill, which was among the world's largest mills in its time. The phrase "St. Paul is the last city of the East, Minneapolis the first city of the West" alludes to the historical difference.[5]

Farming

The state's oldest farms are in Washington County. The county borders the St. Croix River and Wisconsin on the eastern side of the metropolitan area. Joseph Haskell was Minnesota's first white farmer, harvesting the first crops in the state in 1840 on what is now part of Afton Township on Trading Post Trail.[6]

Grand Excursion

The Grand Excursion, a trip into the Upper Midwest sponsored by the Rock Island Railroad, brought more than a thousand curious travelers into the area by rail and steamboat in 1854. In 1855, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow published The Song of Hiawatha, an epic poem based on the Ojibwe legends of Hiawatha. A number of natural area landmarks appear in the story, including Lake Minnetonka and Minnehaha Falls. Tourists inspired by the coverage of the Grand Excursion in eastern newspapers and those who read The Song of Hiawatha flocked to the area in the following decades.

Rail transport

At one time, the region also had numerous passenger rail services, including both interurban streetcar systems and interstate rail. Due to the river's width at points further south, the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area was briefly one of the few places where the Mississippi could be crossed by railroad. Much commercial rail traffic also ran through the area, often carrying grain to be processed at Minneapolis mills or delivering other goods to Saint Paul to be transported along the Mississippi. Saint Paul was long at the head of navigation on the river, until a lock and dam facility was added upriver in Minneapolis.

Passenger travel hit its peak in 1888, with nearly eight million traversing to and from Saint Paul Union Depot.[citation needed] This amounted to approximately 150 trains daily. Soon, other rail crossings were built farther south and travel through the region began to decline. In an effort by the rail companies to combat the rise of the automobile, some of the earliest streamliners ran from Chicago to Minneapolis/Saint Paul and eventually served distant points in the Pacific Northwest. Today, the only vestige of this interstate service is Amtrak's Seattle/Portland to Chicago Empire Builder route, running once daily in each direction. It is named after James J. Hill, a railroad tycoon who settled on Summit Avenue in Saint Paul in what is now known as the James J. Hill House.

Socioeconomic history

Like many Northern cities that grew up with the Industrial Revolution, Minneapolis and St. Paul experienced shifts in their economic base as heavy industry declined, especially in the 1960s and 1970s. With the economic decline of those decades came population decline in the central city areas, white flight to suburbs,[7] and, in the summer of 1967, race riots on Minneapolis's North Side.[8] But by the 1980s and 1990s, Minneapolis and Saint Paul were often cited as former Rust Belt cities that had made successful transitions to service, high-technology, finance, and information economies.[9]

In May and June 2020, the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area became a focus of international attention after MPD officer Derek Chauvin murdered George Floyd by kneeling on his neck for almost ten minutes. The murder sparked local, nationwide and international protests against racism and police brutality, bringing considerable attention to the MPD.[10] Minneapolis–Saint Paul was the site of the second-costliest act of civil disobedience in U.S. history, after the 1992 Los Angeles Riots.[11] Local protests and riots caused an estimated $550 million in damages[12] and affected around 1,600 businesses.[13]

Rivalry

Minneapolis and Saint Paul have competed since they were founded, resulting in some duplication of effort.[14] After Saint Paul completed its elaborate cathedral in 1915, Minneapolis followed up with the equally ornate Basilica of St. Mary in 1926. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the rivalry became so intense that an architect practicing in one city was often refused business in the other. The 1890 United States Census even led to the two cities arresting and/or kidnapping each other's census takers, in an attempt to keep each city from outgrowing the other.[15][16][17]

The rivalry occasionally erupted into inter-city violence, as at a 1929 game between the Minneapolis Millers and the St. Paul Saints, both baseball teams of the American Association.[18] In the 1950s, both cities competed for a major league baseball franchise (which resulted in two rival stadiums being built), and there was a brief period in the mid-1960s when the two cities could not agree on a common calendar for daylight saving time, resulting in a few weeks when people in Minneapolis were one hour "behind" those in Saint Paul.[19]

The cities' mutual antagonism was largely healed by the end of the 1960s, aided by the simultaneous arrival in 1961 of the Minnesota Twins of the American League and the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League, both of which identified themselves with the state as a whole (the former explicitly named for both Twin Cities) rather than either city (like the earlier Minneapolis Lakers). Since 1961, it has been common practice for any major sports team based in the Twin Cities to be named for Minnesota as a whole. In terms of development, the two cities remain distinct in their progress, with Minneapolis absorbing new and avant-garde architecture while Saint Paul continues to carefully integrate new buildings into the context of classical and Victorian styles.[14]

Geography and geology

Like much of Minnesota, the Twin Cities area was shaped by water and ice over millions of years. The area's land sits atop thick layers of sandstone and limestone laid down as seas encroached upon and receded from the region. Erosion caused natural caves to develop, which were expanded into mines when white settlers came to the area. During Prohibition, at least one speakeasy was built into these hidden spaces—eventually refurbished as Saint Paul's Wabasha Street Caves.

Lakes across the area were formed and altered by the movement of glaciers. This left many bodies of water in the region, some with unusual shapes. For example, Lake Minnetonka, toward the western side of the Twin Cities, consists of a complex arrangement of channels and large bays. Elevations in the area range from 1,376 feet (419 m) above sea level in the northwest metro to 666 feet (203 m) at the edge of the Mississippi River in the southeast.

Because it is relatively easy to dig through limestone and there are many natural and manmade open spaces, it has often been proposed that the area should consider building subways for public transportation. That could be less expensive in the Twin Cities than in many other places, but would still be much more expensive than surface projects.

Climate

 
August swimming at Quarry Park and Nature Preserve, Waite Park near St. Cloud

Owing to their northerly latitude and inland location, the Twin Cities experience the coldest climate of any major metropolitan area in the United States.[20] But due to their southern location in the state and the urban heat island, the Twin Cities are among Minnesota's warmest places.[21] The average annual temperature recorded at the Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport is 45.4 °F (7.4 °C); 3.5 °F (1.9 °C) colder than Winona, Minnesota, and 8.8 °F (4.9 °C) warmer than Roseau, Minnesota.[22] Monthly average daily high temperatures range from 21.9 °F (−5.6 °C) in January to 83.3 °F (28.5 °C) in July; the average daily minimum temperatures for those months are 4.3 °F (−15.4 °C) and 63.0 °F (17.2 °C) respectively.[23]

 
Viewing the Saint Paul Winter Carnival parade in January.

Minimum temperatures of 0 °F (−18 °C) or lower are seen on an average of 29.7 days per year, and 76.2 days do not have a maximum temperature exceeding the freezing point. Temperatures above 90 °F (32 °C) occur an average of 15 times per year. High temperatures above 100 °F (38 °C) have been common in recent years; the last was on July 6, 2012. The lowest temperature ever reported at the Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport was −34 °F (−37 °C) on January 22, 1936; the highest, 108 °F (42 °C), was reported on July 14 of the same year.[24] Early settlement records at Fort Snelling show temperatures as low as −42 °F (−41 °C). Recent records include −40 °F (−40 °C) at Vadnais Lake on February 2, 1996 (National Climatic Data Center)

Precipitation averages 29.41 inches (74.7 cm) per year, and is most plentiful in June (4.34 inches (11.0 cm)) and least so in February (0.79 inches (2.0 cm)). The greatest one-day rainfall amount was 9.15 inches (23.2 cm), reported on July 23, 1987. The cities' record for lowest annual precipitation was set in 1910, when 11.54 inches (29.3 cm) fell throughout the year; coincidentally, the opposite record of 40.15 inches (1,020 mm) was set the next year.[25] At an annual average of 56.3 inches (1,430 mm), snowfall is generally abundant.[26]

The Twin Cities area takes the brunt of many types of extreme weather, including high-speed straight-line winds, tornadoes, flash floods, drought, heat, bitter cold, and blizzards. The costliest weather disaster in Twin Cities history was a derecho event on May 15, 1998. Hail and wind damage exceeded $950 million, much of it in the Twin Cities.[27] Other memorable Twin Cities weather-related events include the tornado outbreak on May 6, 1965, the Armistice Day Blizzard on November 11, 1940, and the Halloween Blizzard of 1991. In January 2019, Minnesota experienced its coldest temperatures since 1996, when a polar vortex dropped temperatures as low as −56 °F (−49 °C) in Cotton, Minnesota, with wind-chill temperatures lower than −60 °F (−51 °C) in much of the state. These temperatures are colder than those found on the surface of Mars. (See: Department of Natural Resources - Cold Outbreak: January 27-31, 2019)

A normal growing season in the metro extends from late April or early May through the month of October.[28] The USDA places the area in the 4a plant hardiness zone.[29]

Communities

Metropolitan Statistical Area

The Minneapolis–St. Paul–Bloomington MN–WI Metropolitan Statistical Area, or Twin Cities, includes 15 counties, of which 13 are in Minnesota and two in Wisconsin. The Minnesota portion accounts for almost two-thirds of Minnesota's population.

Note: Counties that are bolded are under jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Council. Counties that are italicized were added to the metropolitan area when the Office of Management and Budget revised its delineations of metropolitan statistical areas in 2013.[30][31] Sibley County was included in the metropolitan statistical area from 2013 to September 2018.[32]

 
Map of the 21 counties of the Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN-WI Combined Statistical Area as of 2018.
  MSA counties under the Metropolitan Council
  Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington MSA counties defined by the Census as "central"
  Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington MSA counties defined by the Census as "outlying"
  Counties included in the St. Cloud Metropolitan Statistical Area
  Counties that are separate Micropolitan Statistical Areas
County Seat 2021 Estimate 2020 Census Change Area Density
Hennepin Minneapolis 1,267,416 1,281,565 −1.10% 607 sq mi (1,570 km2) 2,088/sq mi (806/km2)
Ramsey Saint Paul 543,257 552,352 −1.65% 170 sq mi (440 km2) 3,196/sq mi (1,234/km2)
Dakota Hastings 442,038 439,882 +0.49% 587 sq mi (1,520 km2) 753/sq mi (291/km2)
Anoka Anoka 367,018 363,887 +0.86% 446 sq mi (1,160 km2) 823/sq mi (318/km2)
Washington Stillwater 272,256 267,568 +1.75% 423 sq mi (1,100 km2) 644/sq mi (249/km2)
Scott Shakopee 153,268 150,928 +1.55% 365 sq mi (950 km2) 420/sq mi (162/km2)
Wright Buffalo 144,845 141,337 +2.48% 714 sq mi (1,850 km2) 203/sq mi (78/km2)
Carver Chaska 108,626 106,922 +1.59% 376 sq mi (970 km2) 289/sq mi (112/km2)
Sherburne Elk River 99,074 97,183 +1.95% 451 sq mi (1,170 km2) 220/sq mi (85/km2)
St. Croix, WI Hudson 95,044 93,536 +1.61% 736 sq mi (1,910 km2) 129/sq mi (50/km2)
Chisago Center City 57,469 56,621 +1.50% 442 sq mi (1,140 km2) 130/sq mi (50/km2)
Pierce, WI Ellsworth 42,587 42,212 +0.89% 592 sq mi (1,530 km2) 72/sq mi (28/km2)
Isanti Cambridge 41,906 41,135 +1.87% 452 sq mi (1,170 km2) 93/sq mi (36/km2)
Le Sueur Le Center 28,841 28,674 +0.58% 449 sq mi (1,160 km2) 64/sq mi (25/km2)
Mille Lacs Milaca 26,867 26,459 +1.54% 682 sq mi (1,770 km2) 39/sq mi (15/km2)
Total 3,690,512 3,690,261 +0.01% 8,093 sq mi (20,960 km2) 456/sq mi (176/km2)

Combined Statistical Area

The Minneapolis–St. Paul, MN–WI Combined Statistical Area is made up of 19 counties in Minnesota and two counties in Wisconsin. The statistical area includes two metropolitan areas and four micropolitan areas. As of the 2010 census, the CSA had a population of 3,682,928 (though a July 1, 2012 estimate placed it at 3,691,918). In 2013, the Owatonna Micropolitan Statistical Area was added.[33]

Statistical Area 2021 Estimate 2020 Census Change Area Density
Minneapolis–St. Paul–Bloomington MN–WI Metropolitan Statistical Area 3,690,512 3,690,261 +0.01% 8,093 sq mi (20,960 km2) 456/sq mi (176/km2)
St. Cloud, MN Metropolitan Statistical Area (Stearns and Benton counties) 200,406 199,801 +0.30% 1,803 sq mi (4,670 km2) 111/sq mi (43/km2)
Faribault-Northfield, MN Micropolitan Statistical Area (Rice County) 67,262 67,097 +0.25% 516 sq mi (1,340 km2) 130/sq mi (50/km2)
Red Wing, MN Micropolitan Statistical Area (Goodhue County) 47,968 47,582 +0.81% 780 sq mi (2,000 km2) 61/sq mi (24/km2)
Owatonna, MN Micropolitan Statistical Area (Steele County) 37,349 37,406 −0.15% 432 sq mi (1,120 km2) 86/sq mi (33/km2)
Hutchinson, MN Micropolitan Statistical Area (McLeod County) 36,735 36,771 −0.10% 506 sq mi (1,310 km2) 73/sq mi (28/km2)
Total 4,080,232 4,078,788 +0.04% 12,130 sq mi (31,400 km2) 336/sq mi (130/km2)

Note: Owatonna MSA was not part of CSA in 2010.

Cities and suburbs

There are approximately 218 incorporated municipalities in the Twin Cities metropolitan region. This includes census-designated places and villages in Wisconsin, but excludes unincorporated towns in Wisconsin, known as civil townships in other states. Population numbers are from the 2020 census.[34]

Principal cities

Places with 50,000 to 99,999 inhabitants

Places with 25,000 to 49,999 inhabitants

Places with 10,000 to 24,999 inhabitants

Places with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants

Culture

Fine and performing arts

The Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area fine art museums include the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the Walker Art Center, the Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum, Minnesota Museum of American Art and The Museum of Russian Art. Other museums include American Swedish Institute, Science Museum of Minnesota, Minnesota Children's Museum, Bell Museum (natural history and planetarium) and The Bakken Museum (science and technology). The Minnesota Orchestra and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra are full-time professional musical ensembles. The Guthrie Theater is a world-class regional theater overlooking the Mississippi River. The Minnesota Fringe Festival is an annual celebration of theatre, dance, improvisation, puppetry, kids' shows, visual art, and musicals.[35]

The Twin Cities is also the home of Minnesota Public Radio (MPR), the nation's second-largest public radio station. It has both a classical station and a contemporary station, The Current, which plays music from regional and other contemporary artists. The MPR program A Prairie Home Companion, hosted by Minnesota native Garrison Keillor, aired live for many years from the Fitzgerald Theater in Saint Paul. The show ended its run in 2016, with its successor Live from Here also airing from the same venue. This radio program was the basis of the 2006 film A Prairie Home Companion.

The Brave New Workshop Comedy Theater is a sketch and improvisational comedy theater in Minneapolis. It is the nation's oldest comedy theater.

The Current and the Walker Art Center also host the annual music festival Rock the Garden, which features nationally recognized and local artists. The festival has been held annually since 2008 and has featured artists such as Lizzo, Hippo Campus, Chance the Rapper, Bon Iver, The Flaming Lips, Wilco and Sonic Youth.[36]

The Basilica of Saint Mary in Minneapolis hosts the annual Basilica Block Party, another music festival, which has featured nationally recognized artists such as Weezer, Andy Grammer, Death Cab for Cutie and Panic! at the Disco. The festival is used as a fundraiser for the restoration of the basilica.[37] The event draws about 25,000 people to the downtown area.

The Twin Cities area also has a number of venues where artists come to perform. Minneapolis is home to First Avenue. First Avenue is known for being the starting venue for many famous artists and bands from the area, including Prince, The Replacements, Atmosphere, and Manny Phesto. It became one of the most recognizable venues in Minnesota after the release of the Prince movie Purple Rain, in which it is featured.

Outdoors

 
A Saint Paul Bouncing Team aerialist exhibition in St. Paul

There are numerous lakes in the region, and some cities in the area have extensive park systems for recreation. Organized recreation includes the Great River Energy bicycle festival, the Twin Cities Marathon, and the U.S. pond hockey championships. Some studies have shown that area residents take advantage of this, and are among the most physically fit in the country, but others have disputed that. Medicine is a major industry in the region and the southeasterly city of Rochester, as the University of Minnesota has joined other colleges and hospitals in doing significant research, and major medical device manufacturers started in the region (the most prominent is Medtronic).[citation needed] Technical innovators have brought important advances in computing, including the Cray line of supercomputers.

Many Twin Cities residents own or share cabins and other properties along lakes and forested areas in central and northern Minnesota, and weekend trips "up North" happen in the warmer months. Ice fishing is a major winter pastime, although overambitious fishers sometimes find themselves in danger when they venture onto the ice too early or too late. Hunting, snowmobiling, ATV riding and other outdoor activities are also popular. This connection to the outdoors also brings a strong sense of environmentalism to many Minnesotans.

In 2011 and 2012, the American College of Sports Medicine named Minneapolis–Saint Paul the nation's healthiest metropolitan area.[38][39]


Sports

 
The 1905 Minneapolis Millers baseball team

The Twin Cities is one of 13 American metropolitan areas with teams in all four major professional sports—baseball (MLB), football (NFL), basketball (NBA) and ice hockey (NHL). Including Major League Soccer, it is one of 11 metro areas with five major professional sports teams. To avoid favoring either city, most teams based in the area use only the word "Minnesota" in their names, rather than "Minneapolis" or "St. Paul".

Minneapolis was the site of two Super BowlsSuper Bowl XXVI in 1992 and Super Bowl LII in 2018. It is the farthest north that a Super Bowl has ever been played. The Minnesota Vikings have played in four Super Bowls—IV in 1970, VIII in 1974, IX in 1975 and XI in 1977.

The World Series has been played in the Twin Cities three times—1965, 1987 and 1991—as have three Major League Baseball All-Star Games—1965, 1985 and 2014. NHL All-Star games were hosted in 1972 and 2004, NBA All-Star game in 1994, WNBA All-Star game in 2018 and MLS All-Star game in 2022.

The Stanley Cup Finals have been played in the Twin Cities twice, in 1981 and 1991. The NHL Stadium Series had a game in the Twin Cities in 2016.

The Final Four Men's National College Athletics Association (NCAA) basketball tournament has been hosted by Minneapolis four times—1951, 1992, 2001 and 2019—and the Women's twice, in 1995 and 2022.

The Frozen Four Men's NCAA hockey tournament has been hosted by the Twin Cities eight times—1958, 1966, 1989, 1991, 1994, 2002, 2011 and 2018. It is scheduled to return in 2024.

 
Over 3,700 fans attend the opening bout of the 2007 Minnesota RollerGirls season

Major golf tournaments hosted in the Twin Cities include: U.S. Open—1916, 1930, 1970, 1991; U.S. Women's Open—1966, 1977, 2008; PGA Championship—1932, 1954, 2002, 2009; Women's PGA Championship, 2019; Walker Cup, 1957; Solheim Cup, 2002; and the Ryder Cup, 2016. The Ryder Cup is scheduled to return in 2028.

The 1998 World Figure Skating Championships were held at the Target Center in Minneapolis.

The 2017, 2018 and 2019 X Games were held in Minneapolis. The 2020 X Games were canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Twin Cities host three nationally competing Roller Derby leagues: the Minnesota Roller Derby of the Women's Flat Track Derby Association Division 1, the North Star Roller Derby of WFTDA Division 2, and Minnesota Men's Roller Derby, a league of the Men's Roller Derby Association. MNRD and NSRD have four home teams each: the Dagger Dolls, Garda Belts, Rockits, and Atomic Bombshells of MNRD and the Banger Sisters, Delta Delta Di, Kilmores, and Violent Femmes of NSRD, as well as two traveling teams each. MMRD has three home teams: The Gentlemen's Club, Destruction Workers, and Thunderjacks, and two traveling teams.

The annual Twin Cities Marathon is held in the fall with a course running through Minneapolis and Saint Paul. Minneapolis was the birthplace of Rollerblade and is a center for inline skating, as well as home to the most golfers per capita of any U.S. city.[40] Additionally, water skiing got its start on Lake Pepin, a lake southeast of the metropolitan area, in the Mississippi River about 50 miles (80 km) downstream from Saint Paul.[41]

Some other sports teams gained their names from being in Minnesota before relocating. The Los Angeles Lakers get their name from once being based in Minneapolis, the City of Lakes. The Dallas Stars also derived their name from their tenure as a Minnesota team, the Minnesota North Stars.

Professional sports teams in Minneapolis–Saint Paul

Club Sport League Venue City Since Titles
Minnesota Twins Baseball American League, Major League Baseball Target Field Minneapolis 1961 1987, 1991
St. Paul Saints Baseball International League, Minor League Baseball CHS Field St. Paul 1993 2019 (AA)
1993, 1995, 1996, and 2004 (NL)
Minnesota Vikings American football National Football League U.S. Bank Stadium Minneapolis 1961 1969 (Not Super Bowl)
Minnesota Vixen American football Women's Football Alliance Sea Foam Stadium St. Paul 1999
Minnesota Timberwolves Basketball National Basketball Association Target Center Minneapolis 1989
Minnesota Lynx Basketball Women's National Basketball Association Target Center Minneapolis 1999 2011, 2013, 2015, 2017
Minnesota Wild Ice hockey National Hockey League Xcel Energy Center St. Paul 2000
Minnesota Whitecaps Ice hockey Premier Hockey Federation TRIA Rink St. Paul 2004 2010 (Clarkson Cup), 2019 (Isobel Cup)
Minnesota United FC Soccer Major League Soccer Allianz Field St. Paul 2015 2011 (NASL)

The Twin Cities are also home of the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers who play in the Big Ten Conference.

Media

Print

The Twin Cities have two major daily newspapers: the Star Tribune and the Saint Paul Pioneer Press. The Minnesota Daily serves the University of Minnesota's Twin Cities campus and surrounding neighborhoods. There is one general-interest neighborhood weekly newspaper still in the cities: The East Side Review, devoted to the 90,000 residents in St. Paul's eastern third. Other weekly papers are devoted to specific audiences/demographics, including (until 2020) City Pages.

Television

 
KARE television broadcast, Minnesota State Fair

The region is the 15th-largest television market, according to Nielsen Media Research. Three duopolies exist in the Twin Cities: Twin Cities PBS operates KTCA and KTCI, Hubbard Broadcasting (built by Stanley E. Hubbard) owns ABC affiliate KSTP-TV and independent station KSTC-TV, and Fox Television Stations operates Fox owned-and-operated station KMSP-TV and MyNetworkTV O&O WFTC. Diversified from radio, KSTP-TV became the first TV channel to air in the region with a show reaching 3,000 sets in 1948, and the 17th station to broadcast in the U.S.[42]

 

The only station with its main studios in Minneapolis is CBS O&O WCCO, while Saint Paul hosts KSTP/KSTC, KTCA/KTCI, and CW affiliate WUCW. NBC affiliate KARE has a broadcasting complex in suburban Golden Valley. KMSP is in suburban Eden Prairie. For much of the last two decades, WCCO and KARE have shared in having the most popular evening newscasts in the area. On the other end, KSTP has struggled to maintain ratings on its news programs. KMSP has had a 9 o'clock newscast since at least the early 1990s, when it was an independent channel.

Communities in the region have their own public, educational, and government access (PEG) cable television channels. One, the Metro Cable Network, is available on channel 6 on cable systems across the seven-county region.

Several television programs originating in the Twin Cities have aired nationally on terrestrial and cable TV networks. KTCA created the science program Newton's Apple and distributes a children's program today. A few unusual comedic shows also originated in the area. In the 1980s, KTMA (predecessor to WUCW) created a number of low-budget shows, including cult classic Mystery Science Theater 3000. The short-lived Let's Bowl started on KARE, and PBS series Mental Engineering originated on the Saint Paul cable access network.

Radio

The Twin Cities radio market was ranked 15th by Nielsen in 2018.[43][44] In November 2018, the area's top five morning radio shows were all FM stations: KSTP, KXFN, KQQL, KDWB, and KXXR.[45] Three of those stations are owned by iHeartRadio. Most stations broadcast on air and online, as livestreams from their websites.

KSTP, a television station, also has radio stations, with pop music format on FM and ESPN Radio on AM. KSTP-AM and FM are owned by Hubbard Broadcasting. In 1985, Hubbard—valued at $400 million—was one of the nation's larger corporate media companies; in 2005, valued at $1.2 billion, Hubbard was a fairly small major-market media operation.[citation needed]

The Twin Cities have a mix of commercial and non-commercial radio stations. The city's market is dominated by iHeartRadio, which operates seven stations. Two small, independent stations are award winners—KUOM, operated by the University of Minnesota, and KFAI public access radio in Cedar Riverside.[46]

Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) airs on KNOW 91.1 FM, KSJN 91.5 FM and KCMP 89.3 FM, with separate programs on each station. It was first nationally known for the variety show A Prairie Home Companion, which ceased production in 2016.[47] Doing business under the name American Public Media, the company is the second largest producer of NPR content, after National Public Radio (of which MPR is an affiliate). KCMP is also known as The Current.

Independent media

The Twin Cities is home to many independent media organizations, including The UpTake and MinnPost.

Demographics

Population

MSA Historical Population
CensusPop.Note
18504,491
186077,5651,627.1%
1870167,674116.2%
1880284,76669.8%
1890540,23289.7%
1900649,73520.3%
1910808,38824.4%
1920921,03113.9%
19301,069,84516.2%
19401,162,3618.6%
19501,346,28515.8%
19601,697,40326.1%
19702,079,82622.5%
19802,255,5028.4%
19902,595,79915.1%
20003,031,91816.8%
20103,346,85910.4%
20203,690,26110.3%
Note: This is the historical population of the counties
currently making up the metropolitan area, not the size
of the metropolitan area at the time. U.S. Decennial Census[48]
1790–1960[49] 1900–1990[50]
1990–2000[51] 2010–2020
CSA Historical Population
CensusPop.Note
18504,909
1860100,5031,947.3%
1870227,182126.0%
1880374,20864.7%
1890651,16074.0%
1900780,92319.9%
1910943,97520.9%
19201,070,39513.4%
19301,228,83514.8%
19401,330,7718.3%
19501,523,42814.5%
19601,891,45924.2%
19702,300,11521.6%
19802,503,3438.8%
19902,866,67814.5%
20003,335,00016.3%
20103,682,92810.4%
20204,078,78810.7%
Note: This is the historical population of the counties
currently making up the CSA, not the size
of the metropolitan area at the time. U.S. Decennial Census[48]
1790–1960[49] 1900–1990[50]
1990–2000[51] 2010–2020

Place of birth

About 93% of the metropolitan area's population is native to the United States, including 0.6% born in Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory, or abroad to American parents. The rest of the population is foreign-born.

The highest percentages of immigrants came from Asia (38.2%), Latin America (25.4%), and Africa (20.1%); smaller percentages of newcomers came from Europe (13.1%), other parts of North America (3.0%), and Oceania (0.2%).[citation needed]

Religion

 
Guardian Angels Catholic Church in Chaska

Minneapolis–Saint Paul is a major center for religion in the state, especially Christianity. The state headquarters of five major Christian churches are there: the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, the Episcopal Diocese of Minnesota, the Presbyterian Synod of Lakes and Prairies, and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). The Presbyterian and LDS churches both have missions in Saint Paul, Minneapolis, and Bloomington, as does the Orthodox Church in America.

The headquarters of the former American Lutheran Church (ALC), Evangelical Lutheran Church, Lutheran Free Church and the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church were in Minneapolis; the headquarters of Augsburg Fortress publishing house still is. The Minneapolis Area Synod and the Saint Paul Area Synod are the largest and third-largest synods of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), respectively.

The Evangelical Free Church of America is headquartered in Bloomington, and the Association of Free Lutheran Congregations is headquartered in Plymouth, along with its seminary and a Bible School.

The Twin Cities are home to a Jewish population of approximately 64,800, with about 31% of Jewish households in Minneapolis suburbs, 24% in Minneapolis, 16% in St. Paul, 14% in the St. Paul suburbs, and 15% in outer suburbs.[53] There is also a Hindu temple in the Twin Cities suburb of Maple Grove. The Twin Cities' sole Sikh gurdwara is in Bloomington.[54] A recent influx of immigrants from Laos and Northern Africa has brought many more religions to the area. There are several Islamic Masjids in the area. There is a temple for the religion of Eckankar in the suburb of Chanhassen known as the Temple of Eck. In addition, many Hmong and Tibetan Buddhist peoples live in Saint Paul; a Hmong Buddhist temple opened in suburban Roseville in 1995. The LDS St. Paul Minnesota Temple opened in Oakdale, a suburb east of Saint Paul, in 2000. There are several Unitarian Universalist communities, such as the First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis, as well as several Pagan and Buddhist groups. Minneapolis–Saint Paul has been called Paganistan due to the large numbers of Pagans living there.[55] An estimated 20,000 Pagans live in the area.[56]

Minneapolis is where the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association started and was its home for more than 50 years.

Politics

The 2008 Republican National Convention was held at the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul. Minneapolis and Saint Paul had submitted combined bids to host the 2008 Democratic National Convention and the Republican National Convention. Minneapolis hosted the 1892 Republican National Convention.

Presidential elections results in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area[57]
Year Democratic Republican Third parties
2020 64.7% 1,151,270 30.7% 546,632 4.6% 82,186
2016 55.3% 910,105 35.8% 589,018 8.9% 146,155
2012 56.9% 934,437 40.8% 670,433 2.3% 37,955
2008 58.0% 927,825 40.3% 644,931 1.7% 27,725
2004 54.6% 842,339 44.3% 683,336 1.2% 18,250
2000 51.0% 679,125 42.5% 566,078 6.5% 86,612
1996 53.5% 631,387 33.6% 396,163 12.9% 152,329
1992 45.9% 583,255 30.5% 387,262 23.6% 299,436
1988 54.8% 611,367 44.2% 493,864 1.0% 10,944
1984 52.2% 558,158 47.2% 504,867 0.6% 6,887
1980 49.1% 494,701 38.7% 389,211 12.2% 123,090
1976 55.1% 527,428 41.8% 399,846 3.0% 29,089
1972 47.3% 398,544 50.4% 424,178 2.3% 19,122

Like most major metropolitan areas, the Twin Cities is a stronghold for the Democratic Party, known in Minnesota as the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party. At the state level, DFLers in the Minnesota legislature have increasingly relied on the Twin Cities to build majorities. Outside of the staunchly liberal urban core, the suburbs of the Twin Cities have been historically competitive for both the DFL and the Republicans.[58]

Economy

The Minneapolis–Saint Paul area is home to 24 Fortune 1000 headquarters. The 2022 rankings are:

MSP
Rank
Company City Sector Fortune
Rank
1 United Health Group Minnetonka Healthcare 5
2 Target Minneapolis Retailing 32
3 Best Buy Richfield Retailing 68
4 CHS Inver Grove Heights Agricultural coop 95
5 3M Maplewood Industrial 102
6 U S Bancorp Minneapolis Banking 150
7 C H Robinson Eden Prairie Logistics 154
8 General Mills Golden Valley Food 201
9 Land O'Lakes Arden Hills Agricultural coop 232
10 Ameriprise Financial Minneapolis Financial 277
11 Xcel Energy Minneapolis Energy 278
12 Ecolab St. Paul Industrial 293
13 Thrivent Financial Minneapolis Financial 351
14 Polaris Medina Recreational equipment 419
15 Securian Financial Group St. Paul Financial 464
16 Patterson Companies Mendota Heights Dental / Veterinary products 429
17 Bright Health Group Minneapolis Healthcare 688
18 Toro Bloomington Lawn care equipment 697
19 APi Group New Brighton Construction 701
20 Winnebago Industries Eden Prairie Recreational vehicles 737
21 H.B. Fuller Vadnais Heights Adhesives 787
22 Donaldson Company Bloomington Filtration 861
23 Vista Outdoor Anoka Recreational equipment 975
24 Sleep Number Minneapolis Bedding 982

Private companies headquartered in the Twin Cities area include Cargill, the country's largest private company, Carlson, Radisson Hotel Group, Holiday Stationstores, and Andersen. Foreign companies with U.S. headquarters in the Twin Cities include Aimia, Allianz Life, Canadian Pacific, Coloplast, Medtronic, Pearson VUE and Pentair.

The Twin Cities' economy is the nation's 13th-largest[59] and ranks second in the Midwest after Chicago. The Minneapolis–Saint Paul area is also North America's second-largest medical device manufacturing center[60] and the fourth-largest U.S. banking center, based on total assets of banks headquartered in the area, after New York, San Francisco, and Charlotte.[61]

The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis covers the 9th District of the Federal Reserve System, which is made up of Minnesota, Montana, North and South Dakota, northwestern Wisconsin, and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Its geographical territory is the third-largest of the 12 Federal Reserve banks.

Education

Colleges and universities

Libraries

Libraries, with numbers of branches

Infrastructure

Buildings and structures

 
The tallest buildings in Minneapolis are, left to right, the IDS Center, Capella Tower and the Wells Fargo Center.

The 11 tallest buildings and 16 of the 17 tallest buildings in the area are in downtown Minneapolis. There is some dispute over which building is the tallest—most Minnesotans think of the IDS Center if asked, but most sources seem to agree that Capella Tower is slightly taller. In early 2005, it was found that the IDS Center is taller by a 16-foot (5 m) washroom garage on top, bringing its height to 792 feet (241 m). Capella Tower and the Wells Fargo Center differ in height by a foot or two. The tallest building in St. Paul is Wells Fargo Place, at 471 feet (144 m).

Buildings have gone up and been torn down rapidly across the region. Some city blocks have been demolished six or seven times since the mid-19th century.[62] No single architectural style dominates the region. The cities have a mishmash of different designs, although structures from a few eras stand out. There were once many stone buildings in the Richardsonian Romanesque style (or at least Romanesque-inspired variants). Minneapolis City Hall is one prominent example of this, though buildings of all types—including personal residences such as the James J. Hill House—were similarly designed.[63] A few decades later, Art Deco brought several structures that survive today, including St. Paul City Hall, the Foshay Tower, and the Minneapolis Post Office. The style of buildings in the two cities varies greatly. In Minneapolis, the trend has been toward sleek lines and modern glass facades, while Saint Paul tends to follow a more traditional style to better accompany its older structures.

Saint Paul and especially Minneapolis underwent massive urban renewal projects in the post-World War II era, so a vast number of buildings are now lost to history. Some of the larger and harder to demolish structures have survived.[62] In fact, the area might be signified more by bridges than buildings. A series of reinforced concrete arch spans crossing the Mississippi River were built in the 1920s and 1930s. They still carry daily traffic. A number have undergone major repair work, but retain the original design. Several are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, including the 10th Avenue Bridge, Intercity Bridge (Ford Parkway), Robert Street Bridge, and the longest, the 4,119 ft (1,255 m) Mendota Bridge. The area is also noted for having the first known permanent crossing of the Mississippi. That structure is long gone, but a series of Hennepin Avenue Bridges have since been built at the site. Both downtowns have extensive networks of enclosed pedestrian bridges known as skyways.

Several prominent Minneapolis buildings helped modernize the city. These include the Walker Art Center, Central Public Library, Weisman Art Museum and the Guthrie Theater. Opening in April 2005, the new Walker Art Center, nearly double its former size, includes increased indoor and outdoor facilities. The Walker is recognized internationally as a singular model of a multidisciplinary arts organization and a national leader for its innovative approaches to audience engagement. The Guthrie received a large amount of media coverage for its opening in June 2006.[citation needed] It was designed by Jean Nouvel and is a 285,000 square feet (26,500 m2) facility that houses three theaters: the theater's signature thrust stage, seating 1,100; a 700-seat proscenium stage; and a black-box studio with flexible seating. In 2002, the National Trust for Historic Preservation put the old Guthrie building on its list of the most endangered historic properties in the U.S. in response to plans the Walker announced to expand on the land occupied by the theater. The original Guthrie building was torn down in 2006.[citation needed]

Healthcare

Hospitals with Numbers of Beds

Trauma Centers - Level I * ; Level II **

Allina Health

Children's Minnesota - 381

Gillette Children's Specialty Healthcare

HealthPartners

  • Lakeview Hospital - Stillwater - 90
  • Methodist Hospital - St. Louis Park - 361
  • Regions Hospital - St. Paul - 452 *
  • St. Francis Regional Medical Center - Shakopee - 89

Hennepin Healthcare

M Health Fairview

North Memorial Health

Ridgeview Health

  • Ridgeview Medical Center - Waconia - 124

Veterans Administration Health Care

Transportation

Roads and highways

In the 20th century, the Twin Cities area expanded outward significantly. Automobiles made it possible for suburbs to grow greatly. The area now has a number of freeways, and many traffic cameras and ramp meters to monitor and manage traffic congestion. There is some use of HOV (high-occupancy vehicle) express lanes, which is becoming more common. To use an express lane, a driver must have a MnPASS transponder or at least one passenger. MnPASS rates are determined by the amount of traffic on the road and/or the time of day. During non-peak times, the MnPASS express lanes, except those on Interstate 394 (I-394) between Minnesota Highway 100 (MN 100) and I-94, are open to all traffic.

I-94 comes into the area from the east and heads northwest from Minneapolis. Two spur routes form the I-494/I-694 loop, and I-394 continues west when I-94 turns north. I-35 splits in Burnsville in the southern part of the region, bringing I-35E into Saint Paul and I-35W into Minneapolis. They rejoin to the north in Columbus (just south of Forest Lake) and continue to the highway's terminus in Duluth. This is one of only two examples of an interstate highway splitting into branches and then rejoining; the other is in Dallas–Fort Worth, where I-35 also splits into east and west branches.

On August 1, 2007, much of the I-35W Mississippi River bridge near downtown Minneapolis collapsed into the Mississippi River around 6:05pm CDT.[64][65] A replacement bridge opened on September 18, 2008.


Interstates


U.S. Highways


Major state highways

Air travel

The main airport in the region is Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport (MSP), a major hub for Delta Air Lines. The airport is also the main hub and operating base for Sun Country Airlines. There are six smaller (relief) airports in the area owned and operated by the Metropolitan Airports Commission (the same agency operates MSP). Some people commute by air to the Twin Cities from northern Minnesota.

Relief airports in the metropolitan area are:

Public transit

 
Bicycle rack on the METRO Blue Line LRT
 

Metro Transit, by far the area's biggest bus service provider, owes its existence to the old streetcar lines in the area. Metro Transit provides about 95% of the public transit rides in the region, with over 900 buses, while some suburbs have other bus services. The University of Minnesota, Twin Cities operates a free bus system between its campuses. This system includes the Campus Connector bus rapid transit line, which travels between the Minneapolis and Saint Paul campuses by a dedicated bus line and throughout the two campuses on normal access roads. The METRO Blue Line LRT (light rail) began operations in June 2004, connecting downtown Minneapolis, Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport and the Mall of America in Bloomington. It was followed by the METRO Red Line BRT (bus rapid transitway) in 2013 connecting the Mall of America with Lakeville along Cedar Avenue through the southern suburbs. The METRO Green Line LRT connecting downtown Minneapolis, the University of Minnesota campus and downtown Saint Paul along University Avenue opened in 2014.[66] Metro Transit operates all three lines. The Northstar Line commuter rail line connecting Minneapolis with Big Lake opened in 2009.

The METRO system consists of six separate projects. There are two light rail lines: the Blue Line, which runs from Target Field in downtown Minneapolis past Minneapolis-St Paul International Airport to the Mall of America; and the Green Line, which runs from Target Field past the University of Minnesota to Union Depot in downtown Saint Paul. The BRT Red Line serves as an extension of the Blue Line across the Minnesota River, where it connects with southern suburbs at four different stations. The BRT Orange Line connects downtown Minneapolis with Burnsville along I-35W. The arterial BRT A and C lines serve as upgrades to existing local bus routes and connect with the Blue and Green lines at certain shared stations.

  METRO

A variety of rail services are being pondered by state and local governments, including neighborhood streetcar systems, intercity light rail service, and commuter rail options to exurban regions. Minnesota is one of several Midwestern states considering high-speed rail service, using Chicago as a regional hub.[67]

The Minneapolis–Saint Paul area has been criticized for inadequate public transportation.[68] Its public transportation system is less robust than those of many other cities its size. As the metro area has grown, the roads and highways have been updated and widened, but traffic volume is growing faster than the projects needed to widen them, and public transportation has not expanded commensurate with the population. Minneapolis–Saint Paul is ranked the fifth-worst for congestion growth of similar-sized U.S. metro areas.[68][dead link] Additional lines and spurs are needed to upgrade public transportation in the Twin Cities.[69] Construction is underway for Green Line extension connecting downtown Minneapolis to the southwest suburb of Eden Prairie. A northwest LRT (Blue Line extension) along Bottineau Boulevard is being planned from downtown Minneapolis to Brooklyn Park. The METRO Orange Line BRT will eventually be extended to Lakeville. The METRO Gold Line BRT is planned to connect downtown Saint Paul to the eastern suburbs within the next few years.

References

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External links

  • Flyby video courtesy NASA/Goddard Scientific Visualization Studio
  • History of the National Weather Service in Minneapolis–St. Paul, Minnesota
  • Lost Twin Cities – Documentary produced by Twin Cities Public Television

minneapolis, saint, paul, twin, cities, redirects, here, other, uses, twin, cities, disambiguation, coordinates, metropolitan, area, upper, midwestern, united, states, centered, around, confluence, mississippi, minnesota, croix, rivers, state, minnesota, commo. Twin Cities redirects here For other uses see Twin Cities disambiguation Coordinates 44 57 N 93 12 W 44 950 N 93 200 W 44 950 93 200 Minneapolis Saint Paul is a metropolitan area in the Upper Midwestern United States centered around the confluence of the Mississippi Minnesota and St Croix rivers in the U S state of Minnesota It is commonly known as the Twin Cities after the area s two largest cities Minneapolis and Saint Paul Minnesotans often refer to the two together or the seven county metro area collectively simply as the cities It is Minnesota s economic cultural and political center Minneapolis Saint Paul Minneapolis St Paul Bloomington MN WIMetropolitan areaMetropolitan areaTop MinneapolisBottom Saint PaulCountryUnited StatesStatesMinnesota and WisconsinPrincipal citiesMinneapolis Saint PaulArea Urban1 021 8 sq mi 2 646 km2 Metro8 120 sq mi 21 000 km2 Highest elevation1 376 ft 419 m Lowest elevation660 ft 200 m Population 2020 1 Density2 594 3 sq mi 1 001 7 km2 Urban2 650 890 16th MSA3 690 261 16th CSA4 078 788 16th MSA CSA 2020Urban 2018Time zoneUTC 6 CST Summer DST UTC 5 CDT Area code s 320 507 612 651 715 534 763 952Minneapolis and Saint Paul are independent municipalities with defined borders Minneapolis sits mostly on the west side of the Mississippi River on lake covered terrain Although most of the city is residential neighborhoods it has a business dominated downtown area with some historic industrial areas the Mill District and the North Loop area Saint Paul which sits mostly on the east side of the river has a smaller business district many tree lined neighborhoods and a large collection of late Victorian architecture Both cities and the surrounding smaller cities are known for their lakes hills and creeks Originally inhabited by the Ojibwe and Dakota people the cities were settled by various Europeans Minneapolis was strongly influenced by early Scandinavian and Lutheran settlers while Saint Paul was settled predominantly by the French the Irish and German Catholics Today both urban areas are home to new immigrant communities including Somalis Hmong Oromo Cameroonians and Liberians Twin Cities is sometimes used to refer to the seven county region governed by the Metropolitan Council regional governmental agency and planning organization The United States Office of Management and Budget officially designates 15 counties as the Minneapolis St Paul Bloomington MN WI Metropolitan Statistical Area It is the 16th largest metropolitan statistical area and third largest metropolitan area in the Midwest with a population of 3 690 261 at the 2020 census The larger 21 county Minneapolis St Paul MN WI Combined Statistical Area which also ranks as the 16th largest had a population of 4 078 788 at the 2020 census Contents 1 History 1 1 European settlement 1 2 Nature 1 2 1 Farming 1 3 Grand Excursion 1 4 Rail transport 1 5 Socioeconomic history 1 6 Rivalry 2 Geography and geology 2 1 Climate 3 Communities 3 1 Metropolitan Statistical Area 3 2 Combined Statistical Area 3 3 Cities and suburbs 4 Culture 4 1 Fine and performing arts 4 2 Outdoors 4 3 Sports 4 3 1 Professional sports teams in Minneapolis Saint Paul 4 4 Media 4 4 1 Print 4 4 2 Television 4 4 3 Radio 4 4 4 Independent media 5 Demographics 5 1 Population 5 2 Place of birth 5 3 Religion 6 Politics 7 Economy 8 Education 8 1 Colleges and universities 8 2 Libraries 8 2 1 Libraries with numbers of branches 9 Infrastructure 9 1 Buildings and structures 9 2 Healthcare 9 2 1 Hospitals with Numbers of Beds 9 3 Transportation 9 3 1 Roads and highways 9 3 2 Air travel 9 3 3 Public transit 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditSee also History of Minnesota and History of Wisconsin St Croix River Stillwater European settlement Edit The first European settlement in the region was near what is now the town of Stillwater Minnesota about 20 miles 30 km from downtown Saint Paul and on the western bank of the St Croix River which forms the border of central Minnesota and Wisconsin Another settlement that fueled early interest in the area was the outpost at Fort Snelling which was constructed from 1820 to 1825 at the confluence of the Minnesota River and the Mississippi River 2 The Fort Snelling military reservation bordered both sides of the river up to Saint Anthony Falls The town of Saint Anthony grew just outside the reservation on the river s east side For several years the only European resident to live on the west bank of the river was Colonel John H Stevens who operated a ferry service across the river When the military reservation was reduced in size settlers quickly moved to the land creating the new village of Minneapolis The town grew with Minneapolis and Saint Anthony eventually merging 3 On the eastern side of the Mississippi a few villages such as Pig s Eye and Lambert s Landing grew to become Saint Paul 4 St Paul showing barges on the Mississippi River the Capitol dome and Minneapolis s skyline in the far background right of St Paul In the lower right is a typical nineteenth century home Taken from Indian Mounds Park Nature Edit Natural geography played a role in the two cities settlement and development The Mississippi River Valley in the area is defined by a series of stone bluffs that line the river Saint Paul grew up around Lambert s Landing the last place to unload boats coming upriver at an easily accessible point seven miles 11 km downstream from Saint Anthony Falls the geographic feature that due to the value of its immense water power for industry defined Minneapolis s location and its prominence as the Mill City The falls can be seen from the Mill City Museum housed in the former Washburn A Mill which was among the world s largest mills in its time The phrase St Paul is the last city of the East Minneapolis the first city of the West alludes to the historical difference 5 Farming Edit The state s oldest farms are in Washington County The county borders the St Croix River and Wisconsin on the eastern side of the metropolitan area Joseph Haskell was Minnesota s first white farmer harvesting the first crops in the state in 1840 on what is now part of Afton Township on Trading Post Trail 6 Lock and Dam No 1 Mississippi River just upstream of the Minnesota River Grand Excursion Edit See also Grand Excursion The Grand Excursion a trip into the Upper Midwest sponsored by the Rock Island Railroad brought more than a thousand curious travelers into the area by rail and steamboat in 1854 In 1855 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow published The Song of Hiawatha an epic poem based on the Ojibwe legends of Hiawatha A number of natural area landmarks appear in the story including Lake Minnetonka and Minnehaha Falls Tourists inspired by the coverage of the Grand Excursion in eastern newspapers and those who read The Song of Hiawatha flocked to the area in the following decades Rail transport Edit At one time the region also had numerous passenger rail services including both interurban streetcar systems and interstate rail Due to the river s width at points further south the Minneapolis Saint Paul area was briefly one of the few places where the Mississippi could be crossed by railroad Much commercial rail traffic also ran through the area often carrying grain to be processed at Minneapolis mills or delivering other goods to Saint Paul to be transported along the Mississippi Saint Paul was long at the head of navigation on the river until a lock and dam facility was added upriver in Minneapolis Passenger travel hit its peak in 1888 with nearly eight million traversing to and from Saint Paul Union Depot citation needed This amounted to approximately 150 trains daily Soon other rail crossings were built farther south and travel through the region began to decline In an effort by the rail companies to combat the rise of the automobile some of the earliest streamliners ran from Chicago to Minneapolis Saint Paul and eventually served distant points in the Pacific Northwest Today the only vestige of this interstate service is Amtrak s Seattle Portland to Chicago Empire Builder route running once daily in each direction It is named after James J Hill a railroad tycoon who settled on Summit Avenue in Saint Paul in what is now known as the James J Hill House Socioeconomic history Edit Like many Northern cities that grew up with the Industrial Revolution Minneapolis and St Paul experienced shifts in their economic base as heavy industry declined especially in the 1960s and 1970s With the economic decline of those decades came population decline in the central city areas white flight to suburbs 7 and in the summer of 1967 race riots on Minneapolis s North Side 8 But by the 1980s and 1990s Minneapolis and Saint Paul were often cited as former Rust Belt cities that had made successful transitions to service high technology finance and information economies 9 In May and June 2020 the Minneapolis Saint Paul metropolitan area became a focus of international attention after MPD officer Derek Chauvin murdered George Floyd by kneeling on his neck for almost ten minutes The murder sparked local nationwide and international protests against racism and police brutality bringing considerable attention to the MPD 10 Minneapolis Saint Paul was the site of the second costliest act of civil disobedience in U S history after the 1992 Los Angeles Riots 11 Local protests and riots caused an estimated 550 million in damages 12 and affected around 1 600 businesses 13 Rivalry Edit Minneapolis and Saint Paul have competed since they were founded resulting in some duplication of effort 14 After Saint Paul completed its elaborate cathedral in 1915 Minneapolis followed up with the equally ornate Basilica of St Mary in 1926 In the late 19th and early 20th centuries the rivalry became so intense that an architect practicing in one city was often refused business in the other The 1890 United States Census even led to the two cities arresting and or kidnapping each other s census takers in an attempt to keep each city from outgrowing the other 15 16 17 The rivalry occasionally erupted into inter city violence as at a 1929 game between the Minneapolis Millers and the St Paul Saints both baseball teams of the American Association 18 In the 1950s both cities competed for a major league baseball franchise which resulted in two rival stadiums being built and there was a brief period in the mid 1960s when the two cities could not agree on a common calendar for daylight saving time resulting in a few weeks when people in Minneapolis were one hour behind those in Saint Paul 19 The cities mutual antagonism was largely healed by the end of the 1960s aided by the simultaneous arrival in 1961 of the Minnesota Twins of the American League and the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League both of which identified themselves with the state as a whole the former explicitly named for both Twin Cities rather than either city like the earlier Minneapolis Lakers Since 1961 it has been common practice for any major sports team based in the Twin Cities to be named for Minnesota as a whole In terms of development the two cities remain distinct in their progress with Minneapolis absorbing new and avant garde architecture while Saint Paul continues to carefully integrate new buildings into the context of classical and Victorian styles 14 Geography and geology EditSee also Geology of Minnesota Like much of Minnesota the Twin Cities area was shaped by water and ice over millions of years The area s land sits atop thick layers of sandstone and limestone laid down as seas encroached upon and receded from the region Erosion caused natural caves to develop which were expanded into mines when white settlers came to the area During Prohibition at least one speakeasy was built into these hidden spaces eventually refurbished as Saint Paul s Wabasha Street Caves Lakes across the area were formed and altered by the movement of glaciers This left many bodies of water in the region some with unusual shapes For example Lake Minnetonka toward the western side of the Twin Cities consists of a complex arrangement of channels and large bays Elevations in the area range from 1 376 feet 419 m above sea level in the northwest metro to 666 feet 203 m at the edge of the Mississippi River in the southeast Bald eagle in Burnsville Because it is relatively easy to dig through limestone and there are many natural and manmade open spaces it has often been proposed that the area should consider building subways for public transportation That could be less expensive in the Twin Cities than in many other places but would still be much more expensive than surface projects Climate Edit Main article Climate of the Twin Cities This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information Last update 2014 January 2023 August swimming at Quarry Park and Nature Preserve Waite Park near St Cloud Owing to their northerly latitude and inland location the Twin Cities experience the coldest climate of any major metropolitan area in the United States 20 But due to their southern location in the state and the urban heat island the Twin Cities are among Minnesota s warmest places 21 The average annual temperature recorded at the Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport is 45 4 F 7 4 C 3 5 F 1 9 C colder than Winona Minnesota and 8 8 F 4 9 C warmer than Roseau Minnesota 22 Monthly average daily high temperatures range from 21 9 F 5 6 C in January to 83 3 F 28 5 C in July the average daily minimum temperatures for those months are 4 3 F 15 4 C and 63 0 F 17 2 C respectively 23 Viewing the Saint Paul Winter Carnival parade in January Minimum temperatures of 0 F 18 C or lower are seen on an average of 29 7 days per year and 76 2 days do not have a maximum temperature exceeding the freezing point Temperatures above 90 F 32 C occur an average of 15 times per year High temperatures above 100 F 38 C have been common in recent years the last was on July 6 2012 The lowest temperature ever reported at the Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport was 34 F 37 C on January 22 1936 the highest 108 F 42 C was reported on July 14 of the same year 24 Early settlement records at Fort Snelling show temperatures as low as 42 F 41 C Recent records include 40 F 40 C at Vadnais Lake on February 2 1996 National Climatic Data Center Precipitation averages 29 41 inches 74 7 cm per year and is most plentiful in June 4 34 inches 11 0 cm and least so in February 0 79 inches 2 0 cm The greatest one day rainfall amount was 9 15 inches 23 2 cm reported on July 23 1987 The cities record for lowest annual precipitation was set in 1910 when 11 54 inches 29 3 cm fell throughout the year coincidentally the opposite record of 40 15 inches 1 020 mm was set the next year 25 At an annual average of 56 3 inches 1 430 mm snowfall is generally abundant 26 The Twin Cities area takes the brunt of many types of extreme weather including high speed straight line winds tornadoes flash floods drought heat bitter cold and blizzards The costliest weather disaster in Twin Cities history was a derecho event on May 15 1998 Hail and wind damage exceeded 950 million much of it in the Twin Cities 27 Other memorable Twin Cities weather related events include the tornado outbreak on May 6 1965 the Armistice Day Blizzard on November 11 1940 and the Halloween Blizzard of 1991 In January 2019 Minnesota experienced its coldest temperatures since 1996 when a polar vortex dropped temperatures as low as 56 F 49 C in Cotton Minnesota with wind chill temperatures lower than 60 F 51 C in much of the state These temperatures are colder than those found on the surface of Mars See Department of Natural Resources Cold Outbreak January 27 31 2019 A normal growing season in the metro extends from late April or early May through the month of October 28 The USDA places the area in the 4a plant hardiness zone 29 Communities EditMetropolitan Statistical Area Edit The Minneapolis St Paul Bloomington MN WI Metropolitan Statistical Area or Twin Cities includes 15 counties of which 13 are in Minnesota and two in Wisconsin The Minnesota portion accounts for almost two thirds of Minnesota s population Note Counties that are bolded are under jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Council Counties that are italicized were added to the metropolitan area when the Office of Management and Budget revised its delineations of metropolitan statistical areas in 2013 30 31 Sibley County was included in the metropolitan statistical area from 2013 to September 2018 32 Map of the 21 counties of the Minneapolis St Paul MN WI Combined Statistical Area as of 2018 MSA counties under the Metropolitan Council Minneapolis St Paul Bloomington MSA counties defined by the Census as central Minneapolis St Paul Bloomington MSA counties defined by the Census as outlying Counties included in the St Cloud Metropolitan Statistical Area Counties that are separate Micropolitan Statistical Areas County Seat 2021 Estimate 2020 Census Change Area DensityHennepin Minneapolis 1 267 416 1 281 565 1 10 607 sq mi 1 570 km2 2 088 sq mi 806 km2 Ramsey Saint Paul 543 257 552 352 1 65 170 sq mi 440 km2 3 196 sq mi 1 234 km2 Dakota Hastings 442 038 439 882 0 49 587 sq mi 1 520 km2 753 sq mi 291 km2 Anoka Anoka 367 018 363 887 0 86 446 sq mi 1 160 km2 823 sq mi 318 km2 Washington Stillwater 272 256 267 568 1 75 423 sq mi 1 100 km2 644 sq mi 249 km2 Scott Shakopee 153 268 150 928 1 55 365 sq mi 950 km2 420 sq mi 162 km2 Wright Buffalo 144 845 141 337 2 48 714 sq mi 1 850 km2 203 sq mi 78 km2 Carver Chaska 108 626 106 922 1 59 376 sq mi 970 km2 289 sq mi 112 km2 Sherburne Elk River 99 074 97 183 1 95 451 sq mi 1 170 km2 220 sq mi 85 km2 St Croix WI Hudson 95 044 93 536 1 61 736 sq mi 1 910 km2 129 sq mi 50 km2 Chisago Center City 57 469 56 621 1 50 442 sq mi 1 140 km2 130 sq mi 50 km2 Pierce WI Ellsworth 42 587 42 212 0 89 592 sq mi 1 530 km2 72 sq mi 28 km2 Isanti Cambridge 41 906 41 135 1 87 452 sq mi 1 170 km2 93 sq mi 36 km2 Le Sueur Le Center 28 841 28 674 0 58 449 sq mi 1 160 km2 64 sq mi 25 km2 Mille Lacs Milaca 26 867 26 459 1 54 682 sq mi 1 770 km2 39 sq mi 15 km2 Total 3 690 512 3 690 261 0 01 8 093 sq mi 20 960 km2 456 sq mi 176 km2 Combined Statistical Area Edit The Minneapolis St Paul MN WI Combined Statistical Area is made up of 19 counties in Minnesota and two counties in Wisconsin The statistical area includes two metropolitan areas and four micropolitan areas As of the 2010 census the CSA had a population of 3 682 928 though a July 1 2012 estimate placed it at 3 691 918 In 2013 the Owatonna Micropolitan Statistical Area was added 33 Statistical Area 2021 Estimate 2020 Census Change Area DensityMinneapolis St Paul Bloomington MN WI Metropolitan Statistical Area 3 690 512 3 690 261 0 01 8 093 sq mi 20 960 km2 456 sq mi 176 km2 St Cloud MN Metropolitan Statistical Area Stearns and Benton counties 200 406 199 801 0 30 1 803 sq mi 4 670 km2 111 sq mi 43 km2 Faribault Northfield MN Micropolitan Statistical Area Rice County 67 262 67 097 0 25 516 sq mi 1 340 km2 130 sq mi 50 km2 Red Wing MN Micropolitan Statistical Area Goodhue County 47 968 47 582 0 81 780 sq mi 2 000 km2 61 sq mi 24 km2 Owatonna MN Micropolitan Statistical Area Steele County 37 349 37 406 0 15 432 sq mi 1 120 km2 86 sq mi 33 km2 Hutchinson MN Micropolitan Statistical Area McLeod County 36 735 36 771 0 10 506 sq mi 1 310 km2 73 sq mi 28 km2 Total 4 080 232 4 078 788 0 04 12 130 sq mi 31 400 km2 336 sq mi 130 km2 Note Owatonna MSA was not part of CSA in 2010 Cities and suburbs Edit There are approximately 218 incorporated municipalities in the Twin Cities metropolitan region This includes census designated places and villages in Wisconsin but excludes unincorporated towns in Wisconsin known as civil townships in other states Population numbers are from the 2020 census 34 Principal cities Minneapolis 429 954 Saint Paul 311 527 Places with 50 000 to 99 999 inhabitants Bloomington 89 987 Brooklyn Park 86 478 Plymouth 81 026 Woodbury 75 102 Maple Grove 70 253 Blaine 70 222 Lakeville 69 490 Eagan 68 855 Burnsville 64 317 Eden Prairie 64 198 Coon Rapids 63 599 Apple Valley 56 374 Minnetonka 53 781 Edina 53 494 St Louis Park 50 010 Places with 25 000 to 49 999 inhabitants Shakopee 43 698 Maplewood 42 088 Cottage Grove 38 839 Richfield 36 994 Roseville 36 254 Inver Grove Heights 35 801 Brooklyn Center 33 782 Andover 32 601 Savage 32 465 Fridley 29 590 Oakdale 28 303 Chaska 27 810 Ramsey 27 646 Prior Lake 27 617 Shoreview 26 921 Chanhassen 25 947 Elk River 25 835 Rosemount 25 650 Places with 10 000 to 24 999 inhabitants White Bear Lake 24 883 Champlin 23 919 Farmington 23 632 New Brighton 23 454 Crystal 23 330 Golden Valley 22 552 Hastings 22 154 New Hope 21 986 Columbia Heights 21 973 Lino Lakes 21 399 South St Paul 20 759 West St Paul 20 615 Forest Lake 20 611 Otsego 19 956 Stillwater 19 394 Hopkins 19 079 St Michael 18 235 Anoka 17 921 Ham Lake 16 464 River Falls Wisconsin 16 182 Buffalo 16 168 Hugo 15 766 Hudson Wisconsin 14 755 Robbinsdale 14 646 Monticello 14 455 Rogers 13 295 Mounds View 13 249 Waconia 13 033 Vadnais Heights 12 912 North St Paul 12 364 East Bethel 11 786 Mendota Heights 11 744 Big Lake 11 686 Lake Elmo 11 335 Little Canada 10 819 North Branch 10 787 Victoria 10 546 Places with fewer than 10 000 inhabitantsArden Hills 9 939 Cambridge 9 611 Mound 9 398 St Anthony 9 257 Oak Grove 8 929 Orono 8 315 Minnetrista 8 262 New Prague 8 162 Saint Francis 8 142 Mahtomedi 8 138 Wyoming 8 032 Albertville 7 896 Shorewood 7 783 Belle Plaine 7 395 Dayton 7 262 Spring Lake Park 7 188 Medina 6 837 Isanti 6 804 Jordan 6 656 Delano 6 484 Zimmerman 6 189 Corcoran 6 185 Carver 5 839 Chisago City 5 558 Saint Paul Park 5 544 Falcon Heights 5 369 North Oaks 5 272 Circle Pines 5 025 Lindstrom 4 888 Becker 4 877 Oak Park Heights 4 849 Elko New Market 4 846 Princeton 4 819 Lonsdale 4 686 Watertown 4 659 Nowthen 4 536 Rockford 4 500 Wayzata 4 434 Prescott Wisconsin 4 258 Le Sueur 4 213 Columbus 4 159 Bayport 4 024 Scandia 3 984 Grant 3 966 Deephaven 3 899 Centerville 3 896 Norwood Young America 3 863 Newport 3 797 Montrose 3 775 Independence 3 755 Hanover 3 548 Annandale 3 330 Montgomery 3 249 Rush City 3 072 Afton 2 955 Greenfield 2 923 Milaca 2 901 Cokato 2 799 Osseo 2 688 Le Center 2 517 Mayer 2 453 Excelsior 2 355 St Bonifacius 2 307 Lauderdale 2 271 Lexington 2 248 Maple Lake 2 159 Howard Lake 2 071 Cologne 2 047 Clearwater 1 855 Waterville 1 849 Braham 1 820 Maple Plain 1 743 Long Lake 1 741 Spring Park 1 734 Lakeland 1 710 Stacy 1 470 Tonka Bay 1 442 Waverly 1 410 Dellwood 1 171 Shafer 1 142 Harris 1 111 Taylors Falls 1 055 Lake St Croix Beach 1 043 Vineland 1 001 Hilltop 958 Onamia 878 Birchwood Village 863 Landfall 843 Lilydale 809 Loretto 762 Isle 751 Greenwood 726 Kasota 718 Cleveland 700 Hampton 687 Center City 672 Marine on St Croix 664 Elysian 650 Clear Lake 573 Gem Lake 567 Hamburg 566 Foreston 559 Minnetonka Beach 546 Sunfish Lake 522 Willernie 515 Bethel 476 Randolph 466 New Germany 464 Vermillion 441 Woodland 439 Pine Springs 377 Lakeland Shores 339 Medicine Lake 337 St Marys Point 321 Wahkon 256 Pease 248 South Haven 192 Mendota 157 Kilkenny 148 Coates 147 Miesville 138 Heidelberg 137 Bock 104 New Trier 86 Culture EditSee also Culture of Minnesota Fine and performing arts Edit Guthrie Theater on the Mississippi River in Minneapolis The Minneapolis Saint Paul metropolitan area fine art museums include the Minneapolis Institute of Art the Walker Art Center the Frederick R Weisman Art Museum Minnesota Museum of American Art and The Museum of Russian Art Other museums include American Swedish Institute Science Museum of Minnesota Minnesota Children s Museum Bell Museum natural history and planetarium and The Bakken Museum science and technology The Minnesota Orchestra and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra are full time professional musical ensembles The Guthrie Theater is a world class regional theater overlooking the Mississippi River The Minnesota Fringe Festival is an annual celebration of theatre dance improvisation puppetry kids shows visual art and musicals 35 The Twin Cities is also the home of Minnesota Public Radio MPR the nation s second largest public radio station It has both a classical station and a contemporary station The Current which plays music from regional and other contemporary artists The MPR program A Prairie Home Companion hosted by Minnesota native Garrison Keillor aired live for many years from the Fitzgerald Theater in Saint Paul The show ended its run in 2016 with its successor Live from Here also airing from the same venue This radio program was the basis of the 2006 film A Prairie Home Companion The Brave New Workshop Comedy Theater is a sketch and improvisational comedy theater in Minneapolis It is the nation s oldest comedy theater The Current and the Walker Art Center also host the annual music festival Rock the Garden which features nationally recognized and local artists The festival has been held annually since 2008 and has featured artists such as Lizzo Hippo Campus Chance the Rapper Bon Iver The Flaming Lips Wilco and Sonic Youth 36 The Basilica of Saint Mary in Minneapolis hosts the annual Basilica Block Party another music festival which has featured nationally recognized artists such as Weezer Andy Grammer Death Cab for Cutie and Panic at the Disco The festival is used as a fundraiser for the restoration of the basilica 37 The event draws about 25 000 people to the downtown area The Twin Cities area also has a number of venues where artists come to perform Minneapolis is home to First Avenue First Avenue is known for being the starting venue for many famous artists and bands from the area including Prince The Replacements Atmosphere and Manny Phesto It became one of the most recognizable venues in Minnesota after the release of the Prince movie Purple Rain in which it is featured Outdoors Edit A Saint Paul Bouncing Team aerialist exhibition in St Paul There are numerous lakes in the region and some cities in the area have extensive park systems for recreation Organized recreation includes the Great River Energy bicycle festival the Twin Cities Marathon and the U S pond hockey championships Some studies have shown that area residents take advantage of this and are among the most physically fit in the country but others have disputed that Medicine is a major industry in the region and the southeasterly city of Rochester as the University of Minnesota has joined other colleges and hospitals in doing significant research and major medical device manufacturers started in the region the most prominent is Medtronic citation needed Technical innovators have brought important advances in computing including the Cray line of supercomputers Many Twin Cities residents own or share cabins and other properties along lakes and forested areas in central and northern Minnesota and weekend trips up North happen in the warmer months Ice fishing is a major winter pastime although overambitious fishers sometimes find themselves in danger when they venture onto the ice too early or too late Hunting snowmobiling ATV riding and other outdoor activities are also popular This connection to the outdoors also brings a strong sense of environmentalism to many Minnesotans In 2011 and 2012 the American College of Sports Medicine named Minneapolis Saint Paul the nation s healthiest metropolitan area 38 39 Sports Edit Main articles Sports in Minneapolis Saint Paul and Sports in Minnesota The 1905 Minneapolis Millers baseball team The Twin Cities is one of 13 American metropolitan areas with teams in all four major professional sports baseball MLB football NFL basketball NBA and ice hockey NHL Including Major League Soccer it is one of 11 metro areas with five major professional sports teams To avoid favoring either city most teams based in the area use only the word Minnesota in their names rather than Minneapolis or St Paul Minneapolis was the site of two Super Bowls Super Bowl XXVI in 1992 and Super Bowl LII in 2018 It is the farthest north that a Super Bowl has ever been played The Minnesota Vikings have played in four Super Bowls IV in 1970 VIII in 1974 IX in 1975 and XI in 1977 The World Series has been played in the Twin Cities three times 1965 1987 and 1991 as have three Major League Baseball All Star Games 1965 1985 and 2014 NHL All Star games were hosted in 1972 and 2004 NBA All Star game in 1994 WNBA All Star game in 2018 and MLS All Star game in 2022 The Stanley Cup Finals have been played in the Twin Cities twice in 1981 and 1991 The NHL Stadium Series had a game in the Twin Cities in 2016 The Final Four Men s National College Athletics Association NCAA basketball tournament has been hosted by Minneapolis four times 1951 1992 2001 and 2019 and the Women s twice in 1995 and 2022 The Frozen Four Men s NCAA hockey tournament has been hosted by the Twin Cities eight times 1958 1966 1989 1991 1994 2002 2011 and 2018 It is scheduled to return in 2024 Over 3 700 fans attend the opening bout of the 2007 Minnesota RollerGirls season Major golf tournaments hosted in the Twin Cities include U S Open 1916 1930 1970 1991 U S Women s Open 1966 1977 2008 PGA Championship 1932 1954 2002 2009 Women s PGA Championship 2019 Walker Cup 1957 Solheim Cup 2002 and the Ryder Cup 2016 The Ryder Cup is scheduled to return in 2028 The 1998 World Figure Skating Championships were held at the Target Center in Minneapolis The 2017 2018 and 2019 X Games were held in Minneapolis The 2020 X Games were canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic The Twin Cities host three nationally competing Roller Derby leagues the Minnesota Roller Derby of the Women s Flat Track Derby Association Division 1 the North Star Roller Derby of WFTDA Division 2 and Minnesota Men s Roller Derby a league of the Men s Roller Derby Association MNRD and NSRD have four home teams each the Dagger Dolls Garda Belts Rockits and Atomic Bombshells of MNRD and the Banger Sisters Delta Delta Di Kilmores and Violent Femmes of NSRD as well as two traveling teams each MMRD has three home teams The Gentlemen s Club Destruction Workers and Thunderjacks and two traveling teams The annual Twin Cities Marathon is held in the fall with a course running through Minneapolis and Saint Paul Minneapolis was the birthplace of Rollerblade and is a center for inline skating as well as home to the most golfers per capita of any U S city 40 Additionally water skiing got its start on Lake Pepin a lake southeast of the metropolitan area in the Mississippi River about 50 miles 80 km downstream from Saint Paul 41 Some other sports teams gained their names from being in Minnesota before relocating The Los Angeles Lakers get their name from once being based in Minneapolis the City of Lakes The Dallas Stars also derived their name from their tenure as a Minnesota team the Minnesota North Stars Professional sports teams in Minneapolis Saint Paul Edit Club Sport League Venue City Since TitlesMinnesota Twins Baseball American League Major League Baseball Target Field Minneapolis 1961 1987 1991St Paul Saints Baseball International League Minor League Baseball CHS Field St Paul 1993 2019 AA 1993 1995 1996 and 2004 NL Minnesota Vikings American football National Football League U S Bank Stadium Minneapolis 1961 1969 Not Super Bowl Minnesota Vixen American football Women s Football Alliance Sea Foam Stadium St Paul 1999Minnesota Timberwolves Basketball National Basketball Association Target Center Minneapolis 1989Minnesota Lynx Basketball Women s National Basketball Association Target Center Minneapolis 1999 2011 2013 2015 2017Minnesota Wild Ice hockey National Hockey League Xcel Energy Center St Paul 2000Minnesota Whitecaps Ice hockey Premier Hockey Federation TRIA Rink St Paul 2004 2010 Clarkson Cup 2019 Isobel Cup Minnesota United FC Soccer Major League Soccer Allianz Field St Paul 2015 2011 NASL The Twin Cities are also home of the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers who play in the Big Ten Conference Media Edit Main article Media in Minneapolis Saint Paul Print Edit The Twin Cities have two major daily newspapers the Star Tribune and the Saint Paul Pioneer Press The Minnesota Daily serves the University of Minnesota s Twin Cities campus and surrounding neighborhoods There is one general interest neighborhood weekly newspaper still in the cities The East Side Review devoted to the 90 000 residents in St Paul s eastern third Other weekly papers are devoted to specific audiences demographics including until 2020 City Pages Television Edit KARE television broadcast Minnesota State Fair The region is the 15th largest television market according to Nielsen Media Research Three duopolies exist in the Twin Cities Twin Cities PBS operates KTCA and KTCI Hubbard Broadcasting built by Stanley E Hubbard owns ABC affiliate KSTP TV and independent station KSTC TV and Fox Television Stations operates Fox owned and operated station KMSP TV and MyNetworkTV O amp O WFTC Diversified from radio KSTP TV became the first TV channel to air in the region with a show reaching 3 000 sets in 1948 and the 17th station to broadcast in the U S 42 WCCO TV building Minneapolis The only station with its main studios in Minneapolis is CBS O amp O WCCO while Saint Paul hosts KSTP KSTC KTCA KTCI and CW affiliate WUCW NBC affiliate KARE has a broadcasting complex in suburban Golden Valley KMSP is in suburban Eden Prairie For much of the last two decades WCCO and KARE have shared in having the most popular evening newscasts in the area On the other end KSTP has struggled to maintain ratings on its news programs KMSP has had a 9 o clock newscast since at least the early 1990s when it was an independent channel Communities in the region have their own public educational and government access PEG cable television channels One the Metro Cable Network is available on channel 6 on cable systems across the seven county region Several television programs originating in the Twin Cities have aired nationally on terrestrial and cable TV networks KTCA created the science program Newton s Apple and distributes a children s program today A few unusual comedic shows also originated in the area In the 1980s KTMA predecessor to WUCW created a number of low budget shows including cult classic Mystery Science Theater 3000 The short lived Let s Bowl started on KARE and PBS series Mental Engineering originated on the Saint Paul cable access network Radio Edit The Twin Cities radio market was ranked 15th by Nielsen in 2018 43 44 In November 2018 the area s top five morning radio shows were all FM stations KSTP KXFN KQQL KDWB and KXXR 45 Three of those stations are owned by iHeartRadio Most stations broadcast on air and online as livestreams from their websites Minnesota Public Radio in St Paul KSTP a television station also has radio stations with pop music format on FM and ESPN Radio on AM KSTP AM and FM are owned by Hubbard Broadcasting In 1985 Hubbard valued at 400 million was one of the nation s larger corporate media companies in 2005 valued at 1 2 billion Hubbard was a fairly small major market media operation citation needed The Twin Cities have a mix of commercial and non commercial radio stations The city s market is dominated by iHeartRadio which operates seven stations Two small independent stations are award winners KUOM operated by the University of Minnesota and KFAI public access radio in Cedar Riverside 46 Minnesota Public Radio MPR airs on KNOW 91 1 FM KSJN 91 5 FM and KCMP 89 3 FM with separate programs on each station It was first nationally known for the variety show A Prairie Home Companion which ceased production in 2016 47 Doing business under the name American Public Media the company is the second largest producer of NPR content after National Public Radio of which MPR is an affiliate KCMP is also known as The Current Independent media Edit The Twin Cities is home to many independent media organizations including The UpTake and MinnPost Demographics EditPopulation Edit MSA Historical Population CensusPop Note 18504 491 186077 5651 627 1 1870167 674116 2 1880284 76669 8 1890540 23289 7 1900649 73520 3 1910808 38824 4 1920921 03113 9 19301 069 84516 2 19401 162 3618 6 19501 346 28515 8 19601 697 40326 1 19702 079 82622 5 19802 255 5028 4 19902 595 79915 1 20003 031 91816 8 20103 346 85910 4 20203 690 26110 3 Note This is the historical population of the counties currently making up the metropolitan area not the size of the metropolitan area at the time U S Decennial Census 48 1790 1960 49 1900 1990 50 1990 2000 51 2010 2020CSA Historical Population CensusPop Note 18504 909 1860100 5031 947 3 1870227 182126 0 1880374 20864 7 1890651 16074 0 1900780 92319 9 1910943 97520 9 19201 070 39513 4 19301 228 83514 8 19401 330 7718 3 19501 523 42814 5 19601 891 45924 2 19702 300 11521 6 19802 503 3438 8 19902 866 67814 5 20003 335 00016 3 20103 682 92810 4 20204 078 78810 7 Note This is the historical population of the counties currently making up the CSA not the size of the metropolitan area at the time U S Decennial Census 48 1790 1960 49 1900 1990 50 1990 2000 51 2010 2020Place of birth Edit About 93 of the metropolitan area s population is native to the United States including 0 6 born in Puerto Rico a U S territory or abroad to American parents The rest of the population is foreign born The highest percentages of immigrants came from Asia 38 2 Latin America 25 4 and Africa 20 1 smaller percentages of newcomers came from Europe 13 1 other parts of North America 3 0 and Oceania 0 2 citation needed Religion Edit Guardian Angels Catholic Church in Chaska Minneapolis Saint Paul is a major center for religion in the state especially Christianity The state headquarters of five major Christian churches are there the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis the Episcopal Diocese of Minnesota the Presbyterian Synod of Lakes and Prairies and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church The Presbyterian and LDS churches both have missions in Saint Paul Minneapolis and Bloomington as does the Orthodox Church in America The headquarters of the former American Lutheran Church ALC Evangelical Lutheran Church Lutheran Free Church and the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church were in Minneapolis the headquarters of Augsburg Fortress publishing house still is The Minneapolis Area Synod and the Saint Paul Area Synod are the largest and third largest synods of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America ELCA respectively The Evangelical Free Church of America is headquartered in Bloomington and the Association of Free Lutheran Congregations is headquartered in Plymouth along with its seminary and a Bible School The Twin Cities are home to a Jewish population of approximately 64 800 with about 31 of Jewish households in Minneapolis suburbs 24 in Minneapolis 16 in St Paul 14 in the St Paul suburbs and 15 in outer suburbs 53 There is also a Hindu temple in the Twin Cities suburb of Maple Grove The Twin Cities sole Sikh gurdwara is in Bloomington 54 A recent influx of immigrants from Laos and Northern Africa has brought many more religions to the area There are several Islamic Masjids in the area There is a temple for the religion of Eckankar in the suburb of Chanhassen known as the Temple of Eck In addition many Hmong and Tibetan Buddhist peoples live in Saint Paul a Hmong Buddhist temple opened in suburban Roseville in 1995 The LDS St Paul Minnesota Temple opened in Oakdale a suburb east of Saint Paul in 2000 There are several Unitarian Universalist communities such as the First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis as well as several Pagan and Buddhist groups Minneapolis Saint Paul has been called Paganistan due to the large numbers of Pagans living there 55 An estimated 20 000 Pagans live in the area 56 Minneapolis is where the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association started and was its home for more than 50 years Politics EditSee also Politics of MinnesotaThe 2008 Republican National Convention was held at the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul Minneapolis and Saint Paul had submitted combined bids to host the 2008 Democratic National Convention and the Republican National Convention Minneapolis hosted the 1892 Republican National Convention Presidential elections results in the Minneapolis Saint Paul metropolitan area 57 Year Democratic Republican Third parties2020 64 7 1 151 270 30 7 546 632 4 6 82 1862016 55 3 910 105 35 8 589 018 8 9 146 1552012 56 9 934 437 40 8 670 433 2 3 37 9552008 58 0 927 825 40 3 644 931 1 7 27 7252004 54 6 842 339 44 3 683 336 1 2 18 2502000 51 0 679 125 42 5 566 078 6 5 86 6121996 53 5 631 387 33 6 396 163 12 9 152 3291992 45 9 583 255 30 5 387 262 23 6 299 4361988 54 8 611 367 44 2 493 864 1 0 10 9441984 52 2 558 158 47 2 504 867 0 6 6 8871980 49 1 494 701 38 7 389 211 12 2 123 0901976 55 1 527 428 41 8 399 846 3 0 29 0891972 47 3 398 544 50 4 424 178 2 3 19 122Like most major metropolitan areas the Twin Cities is a stronghold for the Democratic Party known in Minnesota as the Democratic Farmer Labor Party At the state level DFLers in the Minnesota legislature have increasingly relied on the Twin Cities to build majorities Outside of the staunchly liberal urban core the suburbs of the Twin Cities have been historically competitive for both the DFL and the Republicans 58 Economy EditSee also Economy of Minnesota and List of companies based in Minneapolis Saint Paul The Minneapolis Saint Paul area is home to 24 Fortune 1000 headquarters The 2022 rankings are MSPRank Company City Sector FortuneRank1 United Health Group Minnetonka Healthcare 52 Target Minneapolis Retailing 323 Best Buy Richfield Retailing 684 CHS Inver Grove Heights Agricultural coop 955 3M Maplewood Industrial 1026 U S Bancorp Minneapolis Banking 1507 C H Robinson Eden Prairie Logistics 1548 General Mills Golden Valley Food 2019 Land O Lakes Arden Hills Agricultural coop 23210 Ameriprise Financial Minneapolis Financial 27711 Xcel Energy Minneapolis Energy 27812 Ecolab St Paul Industrial 29313 Thrivent Financial Minneapolis Financial 35114 Polaris Medina Recreational equipment 41915 Securian Financial Group St Paul Financial 46416 Patterson Companies Mendota Heights Dental Veterinary products 42917 Bright Health Group Minneapolis Healthcare 68818 Toro Bloomington Lawn care equipment 69719 APi Group New Brighton Construction 70120 Winnebago Industries Eden Prairie Recreational vehicles 73721 H B Fuller Vadnais Heights Adhesives 78722 Donaldson Company Bloomington Filtration 86123 Vista Outdoor Anoka Recreational equipment 97524 Sleep Number Minneapolis Bedding 982Private companies headquartered in the Twin Cities area include Cargill the country s largest private company Carlson Radisson Hotel Group Holiday Stationstores and Andersen Foreign companies with U S headquarters in the Twin Cities include Aimia Allianz Life Canadian Pacific Coloplast Medtronic Pearson VUE and Pentair The Twin Cities economy is the nation s 13th largest 59 and ranks second in the Midwest after Chicago The Minneapolis Saint Paul area is also North America s second largest medical device manufacturing center 60 and the fourth largest U S banking center based on total assets of banks headquartered in the area after New York San Francisco and Charlotte 61 The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis covers the 9th District of the Federal Reserve System which is made up of Minnesota Montana North and South Dakota northwestern Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan Its geographical territory is the third largest of the 12 Federal Reserve banks Education EditColleges and universities Edit Adler Graduate School Minnetonka Anoka Ramsey Community College Coon Rapids and Cambridge Anoka Technical College Anoka Augsburg University Minneapolis Bethany Global University Bloomington Bethel University Arden Hills Capella University Minneapolis Century College White Bear Lake Concordia University Saint Paul Crown College St Bonifacius Dakota County Technical College Rosemount Dunwoody College of Technology Minneapolis Hamline University Saint Paul Hennepin Technical College Eden Prairie and Brooklyn Park Inver Hills Community College Inver Grove Heights Luther Seminary Saint Paul Macalester College Saint Paul Metropolitan State University Saint Paul and Minneapolis Minneapolis College of Art and Design Minneapolis Minneapolis Community and Technical College Minneapolis Minnesota State University Edina Mitchell Hamline School of Law Saint Paul Normandale Community College Bloomington North Central University Minneapolis North Hennepin Community College Brooklyn Park Northwestern Health Sciences University Bloomington Rasmussen University Bloomington Blaine Brooklyn Park Eagan and Lake Elmo St Catherine University Saint Paul and Minneapolis St Cloud State University St Cloud and Maple Grove St Mary s University of Minnesota Minneapolis Saint Paul College Saint Paul United Theological Seminary Saint Paul University of Minnesota Minneapolis and Saint Paul Falcon Heights University of Northwestern St Paul Roseville University of St Thomas Saint Paul and Minneapolis University of Wisconsin River Falls and Hudson Walden University Minneapolis Libraries Edit Libraries with numbers of branches Edit Anoka County Library 9 Bayport Public Library 1 Carver County Library 6 Dakota County Library 10 East Central Regional Library 8 Hennepin County Library 41 Ramsey County Library 7 St Paul Public Library 13 Scott County Library 7 Stillwater Public Library 1 Washington County Library 7Infrastructure EditBuildings and structures Edit The tallest buildings in Minneapolis are left to right the IDS Center Capella Tower and the Wells Fargo Center The 11 tallest buildings and 16 of the 17 tallest buildings in the area are in downtown Minneapolis There is some dispute over which building is the tallest most Minnesotans think of the IDS Center if asked but most sources seem to agree that Capella Tower is slightly taller In early 2005 it was found that the IDS Center is taller by a 16 foot 5 m washroom garage on top bringing its height to 792 feet 241 m Capella Tower and the Wells Fargo Center differ in height by a foot or two The tallest building in St Paul is Wells Fargo Place at 471 feet 144 m Buildings have gone up and been torn down rapidly across the region Some city blocks have been demolished six or seven times since the mid 19th century 62 No single architectural style dominates the region The cities have a mishmash of different designs although structures from a few eras stand out There were once many stone buildings in the Richardsonian Romanesque style or at least Romanesque inspired variants Minneapolis City Hall is one prominent example of this though buildings of all types including personal residences such as the James J Hill House were similarly designed 63 A few decades later Art Deco brought several structures that survive today including St Paul City Hall the Foshay Tower and the Minneapolis Post Office The style of buildings in the two cities varies greatly In Minneapolis the trend has been toward sleek lines and modern glass facades while Saint Paul tends to follow a more traditional style to better accompany its older structures Walker Art Center on Hennepin Avenue in Minneapolis Saint Paul and especially Minneapolis underwent massive urban renewal projects in the post World War II era so a vast number of buildings are now lost to history Some of the larger and harder to demolish structures have survived 62 In fact the area might be signified more by bridges than buildings A series of reinforced concrete arch spans crossing the Mississippi River were built in the 1920s and 1930s They still carry daily traffic A number have undergone major repair work but retain the original design Several are listed on the National Register of Historic Places including the 10th Avenue Bridge Intercity Bridge Ford Parkway Robert Street Bridge and the longest the 4 119 ft 1 255 m Mendota Bridge The area is also noted for having the first known permanent crossing of the Mississippi That structure is long gone but a series of Hennepin Avenue Bridges have since been built at the site Both downtowns have extensive networks of enclosed pedestrian bridges known as skyways Several prominent Minneapolis buildings helped modernize the city These include the Walker Art Center Central Public Library Weisman Art Museum and the Guthrie Theater Opening in April 2005 the new Walker Art Center nearly double its former size includes increased indoor and outdoor facilities The Walker is recognized internationally as a singular model of a multidisciplinary arts organization and a national leader for its innovative approaches to audience engagement The Guthrie received a large amount of media coverage for its opening in June 2006 citation needed It was designed by Jean Nouvel and is a 285 000 square feet 26 500 m2 facility that houses three theaters the theater s signature thrust stage seating 1 100 a 700 seat proscenium stage and a black box studio with flexible seating In 2002 the National Trust for Historic Preservation put the old Guthrie building on its list of the most endangered historic properties in the U S in response to plans the Walker announced to expand on the land occupied by the theater The original Guthrie building was torn down in 2006 citation needed Healthcare Edit Hospitals with Numbers of Beds Edit Trauma Centers Level I Level II Allina Health Abbott Northwestern Hospital Minneapolis 686 Mercy Hospital Coon Rapids 271 Mercy Hospital Unity Campus Fridley 164 Phillips Eye Institute Minneapolis 8 Regina Hospital Hastings 43 United Hospital St Paul 556Children s Minnesota 381 Children s Minnesota Hospital Minneapolis Children s Minnesota Hospital St PaulGillette Children s Specialty Healthcare Gillette Children s Hospital St Paul 60HealthPartners Lakeview Hospital Stillwater 90 Methodist Hospital St Louis Park 361 Regions Hospital St Paul 452 St Francis Regional Medical Center Shakopee 89Hennepin Healthcare Hennepin County Medical Center Minneapolis 484 M Health Fairview Bethesda Hospital long term acute St Paul 50 M Health Fairview Lakes Medical Center Wyoming 61 M Health Fairview Ridges Hospital Burnsville 171 M Health Fairview Southdale Hospital Edina 334 M Health Fairview University of Minnesota Medical Center Minneapolis 828 M Health Fairview University of Minnesota Masonic Children s Hospital Minneapolis 212 St John s Hospital Maplewood 184 St Joseph s Hospital St Paul 253 M Health Fairview Woodwinds Hospital Woodbury 86North Memorial Health Maple Grove Hospital Maple Grove 130 North Memorial Health Hospital Robbinsdale 353 Ridgeview Health Ridgeview Medical Center Waconia 124Veterans Administration Health Care Veterans Administration Medical Center Minneapolis 845 Transportation Edit See also Transportation in Minnesota Roads and highways Edit The Mendota Bridge over the Minnesota River between Fort Snelling and Mendota In the 20th century the Twin Cities area expanded outward significantly Automobiles made it possible for suburbs to grow greatly The area now has a number of freeways and many traffic cameras and ramp meters to monitor and manage traffic congestion There is some use of HOV high occupancy vehicle express lanes which is becoming more common To use an express lane a driver must have a MnPASS transponder or at least one passenger MnPASS rates are determined by the amount of traffic on the road and or the time of day During non peak times the MnPASS express lanes except those on Interstate 394 I 394 between Minnesota Highway 100 MN 100 and I 94 are open to all traffic I 94 comes into the area from the east and heads northwest from Minneapolis Two spur routes form the I 494 I 694 loop and I 394 continues west when I 94 turns north I 35 splits in Burnsville in the southern part of the region bringing I 35E into Saint Paul and I 35W into Minneapolis They rejoin to the north in Columbus just south of Forest Lake and continue to the highway s terminus in Duluth This is one of only two examples of an interstate highway splitting into branches and then rejoining the other is in Dallas Fort Worth where I 35 also splits into east and west branches On August 1 2007 much of the I 35W Mississippi River bridge near downtown Minneapolis collapsed into the Mississippi River around 6 05pm CDT 64 65 A replacement bridge opened on September 18 2008 Interstates I 35 I 35E I 35W I 94 I 394 I 494 I 694 U S Highways US 10 US 12 US 52 Lafayette Freeway US 61 Blues Highway US 169 Johnson Memorial Highway US 212 Minnesota Veterans Memorial Highway Major state highways MN 3 MN 5 MN 7 MN 13 MN 36 MN 47 MN 51 Snelling Avenue North MN 55 Olson Memorial Highway MN 62 Crosstown Highway MN 65 MN 77 Cedar Avenue MN 100 MN 101 MN 120 MN 149 MN 252 MN 156 MN 280 MN 610 Air travel Edit The main airport in the region is Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport MSP a major hub for Delta Air Lines The airport is also the main hub and operating base for Sun Country Airlines There are six smaller relief airports in the area owned and operated by the Metropolitan Airports Commission the same agency operates MSP Some people commute by air to the Twin Cities from northern Minnesota Relief airports in the metropolitan area are Airlake Airport LVN Lakeville Anoka County Blaine Airport ANE Blaine Crystal Airport MIC Crystal Flying Cloud Airport FCM Eden Prairie Lake Elmo Airport 21D Lake Elmo St Paul Downtown Airport STP St Paul Public transit Edit Bicycle rack on the METRO Blue Line LRT Metro Transit storefront Minneapolis Metro Transit by far the area s biggest bus service provider owes its existence to the old streetcar lines in the area Metro Transit provides about 95 of the public transit rides in the region with over 900 buses while some suburbs have other bus services The University of Minnesota Twin Cities operates a free bus system between its campuses This system includes the Campus Connector bus rapid transit line which travels between the Minneapolis and Saint Paul campuses by a dedicated bus line and throughout the two campuses on normal access roads The METRO Blue Line LRT light rail began operations in June 2004 connecting downtown Minneapolis Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport and the Mall of America in Bloomington It was followed by the METRO Red Line BRT bus rapid transitway in 2013 connecting the Mall of America with Lakeville along Cedar Avenue through the southern suburbs The METRO Green Line LRT connecting downtown Minneapolis the University of Minnesota campus and downtown Saint Paul along University Avenue opened in 2014 66 Metro Transit operates all three lines The Northstar Line commuter rail line connecting Minneapolis with Big Lake opened in 2009 The METRO system consists of six separate projects There are two light rail lines the Blue Line which runs from Target Field in downtown Minneapolis past Minneapolis St Paul International Airport to the Mall of America and the Green Line which runs from Target Field past the University of Minnesota to Union Depot in downtown Saint Paul The BRT Red Line serves as an extension of the Blue Line across the Minnesota River where it connects with southern suburbs at four different stations The BRT Orange Line connects downtown Minneapolis with Burnsville along I 35W The arterial BRT A and C lines serve as upgrades to existing local bus routes and connect with the Blue and Green lines at certain shared stations METRO Blue Line LRT Target Field Station Minneapolis St Paul International Airport Mall of America Green Line LRT Target Field Station University of Minnesota Union Depot Orange Line BRT Downtown Minneapolis Burnsville Heart of the City Red Line BRT Mall of America Apple Valley Transit Station A Line BRT 46th Street station Rosedale Transit Center C Line BRT Downtown Minneapolis Brooklyn Center Transit CenterA variety of rail services are being pondered by state and local governments including neighborhood streetcar systems intercity light rail service and commuter rail options to exurban regions Minnesota is one of several Midwestern states considering high speed rail service using Chicago as a regional hub 67 The Minneapolis Saint Paul area has been criticized for inadequate public transportation 68 Its public transportation system is less robust than those of many other cities its size As the metro area has grown the roads and highways have been updated and widened but traffic volume is growing faster than the projects needed to widen them and public transportation has not expanded commensurate with the population Minneapolis Saint Paul is ranked the fifth worst for congestion growth of similar sized U S metro areas 68 dead link Additional lines and spurs are needed to upgrade public transportation in the Twin Cities 69 Construction is underway for Green Line extension connecting downtown Minneapolis to the southwest suburb of Eden Prairie A northwest LRT Blue Line extension along Bottineau Boulevard is being planned from downtown Minneapolis to Brooklyn Park The METRO Orange Line BRT will eventually be extended to Lakeville The METRO Gold Line BRT is planned to connect downtown Saint Paul to the eastern suburbs within the next few years References Edit Census Urban Area List United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 26 2021 The Expansionist Era 1805 1858 Minnesota Historical Society Retrieved May 2 2019 A History of Minneapolis Minneapolis Public Library 2001 Archived from the original on January 4 2009 Retrieved May 2 2019 An Early History Visit Saint Paul Retrieved May 2 2019 Popik Barry Barry Popik www barrypopik com Retrieved August 3 2020 Robb Edwin G 1996 Afton Remembered Afton Historical Society Press ISBN 978 0 9639338 7 4 Orfield Myron Jr 1997 It Couldn t Happen Here Metropolitics a regional agenda for community and stability Washington DC Brookings Institution ISBN 0 8157 6640 8 Neset Ray July 20 2007 Plymouth Avenue 40 Years Later Minneapolis Mirror Archived from the original on January 9 2009 Retrieved May 2 2019 Abercrombie Thomas J Griffiths Annie November 1980 A Tale of Twin Cities Minneapolis and St Paul National Geographic Vol 156 no 5 pp 664 691 Scheiber Noam Stockman Farah Goodman J David June 6 2020 How Police Unions Became Such Powerful Opponents to Reform Efforts The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 7 2020 St Paul rebuilding efforts inch along after civil unrest MPR News Retrieved December 10 2021 Tribune Neal St Anthony Star Minneapolis Foundation raising 20 million for riot hurt small businesses Star Tribune Retrieved November 29 2021 St Paul rebuilding efforts inch along after civil unrest MPR News Retrieved November 29 2021 a b Wingerd Mary Lethert February 2007 Separated at Birth The Sibling Rivalry of Minneapolis and St Paul OAH Newsletter Organization of American Historians Archived from the original on July 7 2012 Census Bred Bitterness St Paul and Minneapolis Have Locked Horns New York Times June 21 1890 They Want Hay s Scalp St Paul Residents Are Going to Descend Upon Washington New York Times June 22 1890 Fighting over the Census St Paul Jealous of Minneapolis and Charges Fraud The New York Times July 23 1890 Thornley Stew 2006 Baseball in Minnesota The Definitive History Minnesota Historical Society ISBN 978 0 87351 551 1 Retrieved October 18 2021 May 10 1965 Minneapolis falls an hour behind St Paul Star Tribune Minneapolis Minnesota TrekkerTime com Retrieved May 7 2007 History of the NWS in the Twin Cities National Weather Service November 9 2005 Retrieved May 7 2007 Seeley Mark W 2006 Minnesota Weather Almanac Minnesota Historical Society press ISBN 0 87351 554 4 Climatography of MSP National Climatic Data Center 1971 2000 Archived from the original on July 9 2012 Temperature Summary 215435 MINNEAPOLIS WSFO AP MN Archived from the original on May 22 2014 Precipitation Summary 215435 MINNEAPOLIS WSFO AP MN Archived from the original on May 19 2014 Snowfall Summary 215435 MINNEAPOLIS WSFO AP MN Archived from the original on April 19 2014 Scott Woelm June 30 2006 Top 10 Minnesota Severe Weather Events 1990 1999 Metro Skywarn Archived from the original on March 28 2007 Retrieved May 7 2007 Growing Season Summary 215435 MINNEAPOLIS WSFO AP MN Archived from the original on July 9 2013 USNA USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map North Midwest US Archived from the original on June 29 2014 Retrieved May 19 2014 Update of Statistical Area Definitions and Guidance on Their Uses PDF Office of Management and Budget November 20 2008 Retrieved March 8 2015 Revised Delineations of Metropolitan Statistical Areas Micropolitan Statistical Areas and Combined Statistical Areas and Guidance on Uses of the Delineations of These Areas PDF Office of Management and Budget February 28 2013 Retrieved March 8 2015 Bureau US Census Delineation Files The United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 27 2021 Table 2 Annual Estimates of the Population of Combined Statistical Areas April 1 2010 to July 1 2012 2012 Population Estimates United States Census Bureau Population Division March 2013 Archived from the original CSV on May 17 2013 Retrieved April 19 2013 2020 U S Census How to fringe Fresh Art Delivered Daily Minnesota Fringe Festival 2006 Archived from the original on November 14 2006 Retrieved November 22 2006 Rock the Garden Basilica Block Party to rise again Here s the 18 lineup Actively Moving America to Better Health PDF American College of Sports Medicine 2011 Archived from the original PDF on September 8 2013 Retrieved May 23 2011 Health and Community Fitness Status of the 50 Largest Metropolitan Areas PDF American College of Sports Medicine ACSM American Fitness Index 2012 Archived from the original PDF on September 3 2013 Retrieved June 29 2012 Douglas Phil Blumer Ward Minnesota Facts and Trivia 50States com Retrieved December 16 2018 A Look Back USA Water Ski amp Wake Sports Foundation Archived from the original on December 17 2018 Retrieved December 16 2018 1922 Ralph Samuelson designed the first water skis from two pine boards and successfully skied on Lake Pepin in Lake City MN A History of Minneapolis Radio and Television Minneapolis Public Library 2001 Archived from the original on April 19 2007 Retrieved May 10 2007 Nielsen Audio Ratings Radio Online 2018 Retrieved December 18 2018 Forum Top 20 US Radio Markets Retrieved December 16 2018 15 Minneapolis St Paul November 2018 Portable People Meter Ratings November 29 2018 Retrieved December 16 2018 HD Radio Minnesota iBiquity 2007 Archived from the original on September 27 2007 and Independent Public Radio 2006 Archived from the original on June 29 2007 Retrieved May 10 2007 Garrison Keillor Hosts Final A Prairie Home Companion Episode The Guardian July 2 2016 Retrieved December 16 2018 a b U S Decennial Census United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on April 26 2015 Retrieved October 15 2014 a b Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved October 15 2014 a b Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 15 2014 a b Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 15 2014 a b Population and Housing Unit Estimates Retrieved June 9 2017 J K Aronson M A Brookner E Chapman D Mangoubi H Aaronson M Feinberg M Boxer amp L Saxe 2020 Portrait of Our Jewish Community 2019 Twin Cities Jewish Population Study Waltham MA Maurice and Marilyn Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies Brandeis University PDF Sikh Society of Minnesota Monthly Minnesota September 14 2009 MNMO Recommends Minnesota Monthly Wiccan prisoner sues state claiming religious rights violated Star Tribune Our Campaigns United States Minnesota President www ourcampaigns com Retrieved March 30 2021 In Minnesota GOP eyes grab of rare Midwest Dem stronghold AP NEWS November 3 2022 Retrieved November 4 2022 Gross Domestic Product by Metropolitan Area 2015 Retrieved July 7 2016 Analysis by Crossborder Group Finds Tijuana 1 City in North America for Medical Device Manufacturing Employment Tijuana Economic Development Corporation July 19 2011 Retrieved August 14 2011 Roberts Deon Rothacker Rick May 24 2017 Goodbye bragging rights Charlotte s no longer the No 2 U S banking center Charlotte Observer Retrieved July 6 2017 a b Millett Larry 1992 Lost Twin Cities St Paul Minnesota Minnesota Historical Society Larson Paul Clifford Martin Judith 1988 Larson Paul Clifford ed The Spirit of H H Richardson on the Midland Prairies Ames Iowa Iowa State University Press 35W bridge collapses over Mississippi River cars in the water St Paul Pioneer Press August 1 2007 Retrieved August 1 2007 35W bridge over Mississippi collapsed St Paul KSTP TV August 1 2007 Archived from the original on October 16 2015 Retrieved August 1 2007 Metropolitan Council Central Corridor transit FAQ Archived from the original on June 12 2011 Retrieved July 3 2011 Midwest Regional Rail Initiative Retrieved June 24 2008 a b Metropolitan Council Release on Traffic Congestion Retrieved October 16 2006 Archived February 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine Metropolitan Council Central Corridor transit FAQ Archived from the original on June 12 2011 Retrieved July 3 2011 External links Edit United States portal Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Minneapolis Saint Paul Flyby video courtesy NASA Goddard Scientific Visualization Studio Fact sheet about Minneapolis St Paul Metropolitan Area Comparison History of the National Weather Service in Minneapolis St Paul Minnesota GIS based Demographic Guide to Twin Cities Region Lost Twin Cities Documentary produced by Twin Cities Public Television Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Minneapolis Saint Paul amp oldid 1149580989, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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