A beloved playground in south Minneapolis is on the brink of demolition, but neighbors are determined to intervene.
As more families with children continue to leave Minneapolis than move in, Minneapolis Public Schools is trying to sell off three closed schools while weighing difficult decisions that could include closing additional facilities. Long-obsolete Cooper Elementary in south Minneapolis isn't currently for sale, but its playground could be.
The Cooper playground, located on the northeast side of the school at 44th Avenue S. and 33rd Street, still serves a lively neighborhood with many young families. But after an MPS inspection conducted in May found that the 1997-era playground equipment had begun to warp and break, the district recommended it be decommissioned. Without money to replace it — Interim Superintendent Rochelle Cox estimated that would cost $330,000 — the district must demolish the playground unless another public or private organization steps up.
Cooper residents of all ages packed the Howe Elementary School gym on Thursday night to share fond feelings of the playground and declare their commitment to finding a solution. Several neighbors had been among the crew that helped build the playground with neighborhood association funds 26 years ago. Others were active users still.
"There's never five minutes where somebody's not there, because everybody loves that park," said fourth-grader Acadia Olson.
"I think we can all agree, we always have our noses in our iPhones and TV and I feel like just to get outside and have fun is just a big part of our childhoods," added her friend Piper Brown. "We can't have that if we don't have a park."
MPS School Board Member Lori Norvell said that while she has gotten a lot of questions about individual volunteers or a neighborhood group interested in fixing the playground, the district couldn't shoulder the liability in case someone was injured.
Some other entity with liability insurance would have to lease or purchase the playground and raise the money to repair or replace it, said Cox. While the district couldn't provide exact costs, nor a guarantee that a future sale of Cooper school wouldn't result in the loss of the playground anyway, she said the district would accept a "nominal" offer.