Uptown is probably the best-known business district in Minneapolis besides downtown. It centers at the intersection of West Lake Street and Hennepin Avenue, but is not officially recognized as it includes parts of four neighborhoods:
South Uptown,
East Bde Maka Ska,
East Isles, and
Lowry Hill East. The Uptown Business Association focuses on the area within a few blocks of Lake and Hennepin, but the "Uptown" identity can stretch as far north as Franklin Avenue and as far east as Lyndale Avenue, where it merges into
Lyn-Lake.
Eat Street is the newest of Minneapolis's commercial districts, named in the late 1990s by the Whittier Alliance to promote the international variety of restaurants along Nicollet Avenue South between Grant St. and 29th St. Nicollet was historically a central commercial district in the
Whittier neighborhood, but the end of the
streetcar system and the construction of a K-Mart at the intersection of Nicollet and Lake Street disconnected the area in the 1970s. The named district was an effort to give the neighborhood a fresh identity. The Old St. Anthony district, also called Northeast or the Riverfront District, straddles the neighborhoods of
Marcy-Holmes and
Nicollet Island/East Bank. It was the downtown for the city of St. Anthony before it joined Minneapolis in 1872. Several areas around the
University of Minnesota have additional names.
Dinkytown is an area just north of the University of Minnesota within the official
Marcy-Holmes neighborhood, heavily populated by students. A row of historic
fraternity houses along University Avenue is called "fraternity row." Similarly,
Stadium Village on the east end of campus in
Prospect Park is named for the now-demolished
Memorial Stadium and current
Huntington Bank Stadium. The Warehouse District was a 19th- and early 20th-century rail and truck shipping center for the region. In the 1970s and 1980s it became an artists' quarter, and then a nightlife and entertainment district, which the southern portion (between I-394 and Hennepin Ave) remains. The district is largely in the
North Loop neighborhood, but the heart of the entertainment district is in
Downtown West. The City designated some of this area the Minneapolis Warehouse Historic District in 1978, with portions spanning from 1st Avenue North to 10th Avenue North and from the Mississippi River to 6th Street North. It was recognized by the
National Register of Historic Places in 1989. It was designated by the city as the Homewood Historic District on February 28, 2017, due to its rich Jewish history. This designation sparked some controversy among Homewood residents.
George Floyd Square, officially George Perry Floyd Square, is centered on the intersection of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue, the site of the
murder of George Floyd. It lies between the neighborhoods of
Bancroft,
Bryant,
Central, and
Powderhorn Park. The area sits along the 38th street cultural district and features memorials, nonprofits, and businesses, acting as both a memorial space and a location for community organizing. As the Mississippi riverfront downtown has been redeveloped since the 1980s, there have been several attempts to rebrand it. The "Mississippi Mile" spanned both sides of the river from Plymouth Avenue to Portland Avenue, but never really caught on locally. "
Saint Anthony Main", the name of a commercial development on Main Street Southeast, can refer to the section of the East Bank around it. More recently, people have come to call the West Bank between 3rd Avenue and the University "The
Mill District", though the historic locations of mills were on both sides of the river. Some neighborhoods enjoy nicknames.
Lowry Hill East is also known as "The Wedge" because of its shape. Local amenities are also taken on as nicknames. "Minnehaha" refers to the area by Minnehaha Falls rather than along Minnehaha Avenue, as evidenced by the location of the Minnehaha Historic District. "Tower (Hill)", along University Avenue Southeast in
Prospect Park, refers to the
Witch's Hat Tower. ==See also==