•
Early 21st century Lincoln Municipal airport renamed Lincoln Airport. •
2000 • Population reaches a quarter of a million people (225,581). • Lincoln declared the 12th largest resettlement site for refugees per capita in the country. •
Gallup announces move of its operational headquarters to Omaha; Lincoln begins to question itself. •
2001 • On January 1, the Lincoln Fire Department began both emergency and non-emergency ambulance services for the city;
Rural/Metro provided service prior to 2001. Around the same time, LFD was renamed the Lincoln Fire & Rescue Department. • Gateway Mall purchased by
Westfield America Trust. •
Kawasaki begins production in its
newly built rail car plant late in the year, located next to its existing Lincoln operations. It is the only rail car facility in the nation that can build a rail car from the ground-up. •
Lancaster Event Center opens with an arena, two pavilions, and offices, with an initial pricetag of $12 million. A $10 million expansion in 2009 brought way to a third pavilion, and a 125,000-square-foot second arena. •
2002 • The
Nebraska Cornhuskers baseball team hosts its first home game at
Haymarket Park on March 5 against the University of Nebraska at Kearney. flood control, transportation and urban revitalization project, begins. It is expected that the largest public works project in Lincoln's history will take six to ten years to complete. • After two years of construction,
Lincoln Southwest High School is completed and classes begin in August. Southwest is the first high school built in Lincoln since 1968. • Just after celebrating 100 years in business,
Cushman is sold to
Textron, Inc. and the plant closes in December. Production moves to other Textron plants in Georgia and North Carolina. •
2003 •
Lincoln North Star Middle/High School completed. • December,
Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center opens. •
2005 •
Westfield Shoppingtown Gateway renamed
Westfield Gateway. • Westfield made a $45 million makeover of the mall in 2005 including an expanded food court, a new west-side entrance and installation of an Italian carousel. • The Lincoln Police Department reactivates its motorcycle traffic unit after a nearly 30-year absence. •
2007 • April 15,
Nebraska Holocaust Memorial in Wyuka Cemetery dedicated. • Lincoln receives beautification grants for improvements on O and West O Streets, west of the Harris Overpass, commemorating the history of the former Detroit-Lincoln-Denver (D-L-D) Highway. •
2008 Nebraska Legislature votes to move State Fair Park from Lincoln to Grand Island by 2010; the University of Nebraska-Lincoln is set to acquire the park after the move and convert it into
Nebraska Innovation Campus. •
2010 • Population is 258,379. • The 2010 Special Olympics USA National Games are held in Lincoln during the month of July. 2,408 athletes, 746 coaches, 258 unified partners and 8,500 volunteers attend. The Olympics also include one of the largest civilian airlifts in aviation history. •
Nebraska State Fair moves from Lincoln to Grand Island. The former fairgrounds becomes the
Nebraska Innovation Campus. • The Star City Parade, in its 26th year, is postponed indefinitely due to budget cuts of the
Great Recession. Organizers hope to have private funding sources secured for a parade next year. •
2011 The
Lincoln Public Schools District Office burns to the ground on the night of May 30 in a four-alarm arson. Losses are estimated at $20 million, the costliest fire in Lincoln's history. •
2012 • Westfield America Trust sells Westfield Gateway to
Starwood Capital Group. Starwood reverts mall's name from
Westfield Gateway to
Gateway Mall. • Antelope Valley Phase I is complete in early September. Phase II is postponed indefinitely. •
2013 Pinnacle Bank Arena, an $179 million project; part of a much larger $344 bond issue (including money for the adjoining West Haymarket development), is completed with a September grand opening.
Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball hosts its first game at the new arena in November. •
2014 • On May 22, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln demolished the former Cushman Motorworks building. Built in 1913 and purchased from Textron in 2003, UNL demolished the building without any notice and without demolition permits from the city. The building featured mission deco-style architecture. As of July 2016, the site of the former factory still sat empty. • U.S. Postal Service plans to downsize; announces plans to move Gateway U.S. Post Office to a different location. Exact location yet to be determined. Gateway Post Office has been at the same location west of Gateway Mall and north of Ameritas, formerly Bankers Life, since 1968. • A 200-year rain hits Lincoln over a period of 20 hours (September 30 to October 1); of rain officially at the Lincoln Airport but some parts of Lincoln see up to . Except for numerous flooded basements, the city mostly goes unscathed. • Lincoln Community Foundation Tower Square, mostly completed earlier in the year, is dedicated on the winter solstice (December 21). •
2015 • Lincoln Mayor
Chris Beutler is elected to a third term; the first mayor to be elected beyond two terms in Lincoln's history. • Record rains hit Lincoln, Lancaster County and southeast Nebraska. Lincoln officially receives of rain on May 6 to 7 at the Lincoln Airport (with higher amounts south of the city); the most rain the city has seen during the month over any 24-hour period. Salt Creek, with a levee system built for a 50-year flood, comes within a foot of topping; its highest crest since 1908. May ends as the wettest on record for Lincoln; of rain for the month. • The 2015 State Games of America were held in Lincoln (and surrounding areas) from July 28 to August 2. 15,244 participants from 47 states and the District of Columbia attended. • On November 5, it was announced that Pinnacle Bank Arena would be hosting the North, Central America & Caribbean Volleyball Confederation's Women's Olympic Qualification Tournament for the 2016 Summer Olympics on January 7–9, 2016. Teams from the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic were expected to attend. • On November 17, it was announced that ALLO Communications (a Nelnet Company) would bring ultra-high speed internet to Lincoln, with speeds up to 1 Gigabit per second over the city's existing fiber network. Citywide network completion was estimated by 2019. • On December 18, Windstream Communications announced that 1 Gigabit internet would come to Lincoln, using its existing fiber network. It was not initially clear how many homes or businesses would have access. •
2016 • In mid-January, it was announced that the future of the Frank H. Woods Telephone Pioneer Museum was unclear. Its lease was ending with Windstream Communications on March 31 because the property was within "The Telegraph District" redevelopment (codeveloped by Nelnet & Speedway Properties). As of mid-February 2016, the museum's fate was still uncertain. • On May 19, a four-alarm fire destroyed Lincoln's oldest, independent grocery store, Ideal Grocery (905 S. 27th Street). Established in 1920, the fire was ruled accidental and the store's fate was uncertain, although the owners indicated that they hoped to rebuild. • On July 21, Bryan Health demolished the historic nurses' dormitory on the Bryan Health West Campus. The dormitory was one of the few remaining original buildings from the former Lincoln General Hospital. •
2021 •
Josh fight ==See also==