For the first two weeks of June, the grass surrounding 3M Arena at Mariucci glitters with graduation cap-shaped confetti.
The 23 high school graduations there this year have come almost back-to-back, sometimes three or four a day. Once the remnants from one school’s celebration is cleaned up, in come thousands more revelers from another.
Over the past 15 years, the Minneapolis arena has increasingly become the go-to location for large suburban high schools looking for an indoor, air-conditioned commencement venue that can accommodate about 6,000 people. For those schools, gone are the days of weather-dependent football field graduation ceremonies or limiting tickets to family members who can fit into the school gymnasium.
Hosting the ceremony offsite can take some pressure off school administrators, said Jim Skelly, spokesperson for Anoka-Hennepin Public Schools, which conducted four of its graduation ceremonies at Mariucci on Sunday, each one spaced out by three hours. But it’s still a lot of work for both school and facilities staff.
“I’m sure the students have no idea how much goes into this,” he said.
Holding multiple commencements in one day is a feat of planning, time management, traffic and parking control, communication, and people-wrangling to ensure that one school crowd can get out before the next one comes in, said Craig Flor, the arena’s director of operations.
The university also boosted security measures and police presence this week after a shooting injured two people outside the arena after Wayzata’s graduation ceremony last Friday. The U has long required Mariucci attendees to walk through metal detectors and have their bags searched.
After 15 years of hosting such ceremonies, the team has streamlined the logistics, Flor said. Many of the schools start their part of the planning process more than a year in advance, especially if they want a coveted weekend date, which have to be planned around religious holidays.