Our Projects

Over the past few years, the scope and scale of work that Metro Blooms has accomplished has grown immensely.  We have performed numerous raingarden installations under our Neighborhood of Raingardens program.  We serve school districts and the business community in helping them to realize better water quality goals.  We also work with cities, counties, watershed districts, and conservation districts in creating valuable public spaces that will add benefit to local communities and provide habitat for numerous species.  See below for a sample of our work.

Audubon Park Neighborhood of Raingardens
Bloomington Green Streets for Blue Waters
Bryant Neighborhood of Raingardens and 40th Street Bikeway
Powderhorn Lake Neighborhood of Raingardens
Sentyrz Liquor and Grocery
Linden Hills Neighborhood of Raingardens
Bob & Debbie Wolk's 50th Anniversary
Victory Cleveland Neighborhood of Raingardens
Schmidt Lake Neighborhood of Raingardens


Audubon Park Neighborhood of Raingardens

Audobon Park

Metro Blooms is working with the Audubon Neighborhood Association to educate Audubon homeowners about the benefits and beauty of rain gardens. Audubon homeowners and property owners are now eligible to participate in a neighborhood rain garden program to manage stormwater runoff in the Mississippi River watershed. Up to 15 properties in Audubon Park will be selected to receive a free rain garden, including significant help with construction and installation. Interested homeowners and property owners can call metro Blooms at 651-699-2426 to register for an on-site consultation with a landscape design assistant. The consultation includes assistance with identifying stormwater conditions on your property, taking measurements, determining the size of your raingarden, and selecting plants. Because ANA will cover 50% of the consultation cost for the first 50 registrants, the cost to homeowners will be only $25. After the first 50 registrants, the cost to homeowners will be $50. Up to 15 of the homeowners who receive consultations will be selected to have a rain garden constructed on their property in Spring 2011. Click here for more information


Bloomington Green Streets for Blue Waters

GSBW LogoJoin Metro Blooms, the City of Bloomington, the Lower Minnesota River Watershed District, and the Friends of the Minnesota River Valley in the Green Streets for Blue Waters project, a mission to reduce pollution and ecological degradation in the Minnesota River. Only 50consultations are available, so sign up today! To sign up or ask questions call Michael Keenan, 763-670-7937 or email:Michael@metroblooms.org
Find out more at  http://www.metroblooms.org/bloomington


Bryant Neighborhood of Raingardens and 40th Street Bikeway

Bryant Neighborhood and 40th Street Bikeway Metro Blooms Landscape Designer, Sam Geer and Bryant Neighborhood's Erin Schwartzbauer at the 40th Street plantings.
Metro Blooms and the Bryant Neighborhood Organization (BNO) worked with the City of Minneapolis to incorporate gardens into pedestrian/cycling improvements along the greenway. The plantings, installed in June, are the first step in a planned series of raingardens on properties along the greenway. The gardens will give the neighborhood a distinctive identity, capture runoff, and help mitigate seasonal flooding around Phelps Park. Neighbors along the greenway interested in a raingarden on their property should contact deb@metroblooms.org to schedule a consult.

Powderhorn Lake Neighborhood of Raingardens

volunteers installing raingardens near Powderhorn Lake, August 2010 volunteers installing raingardens near Powderhorn Lake, August 2010

During the summer of 2010, Metro Blooms worked with residents of the Powderhorn Park and Central Neighborhoods of South Minneapolis to install 100 raingardens over five weeks as part of our Powderhorn Lake Neighborhood of Raingardens project.

The project area is a set of properties that drain into one storm sewer pipe that drains into Powderhorn Lake. We are working with the Minneapolis Parks and Recreation Board to monitor the quality and quantity of stormwater in that pipe, and to compare data with a pipe in a control area nearby. Over three years we will monitor the impact of these 100 raingardens.

The bulk of the project is funded by the Minnesota Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund, and project partners include the City of Minneapolis, Minneapolis Parks and Recreation Board, Minnehaha Creek Watershed District and the Minnesota Conservation Corps.

Filmmaker Mark Pedelty is making a three-part documentary of the project. Part One documents the panning phase and premiered on Twin Cities Public Television in April of 2010. Part 2 will document the installation phase and should come out in early 2011. Part three will follow the project over time.

The project is far from over. In 2011 we will continue to work in the project area to teach residents about raingarden maintenance and helping these raingardeners to make the most of the project.



Sentyrz Liquor and Grocery

Metro Blooms board member Lori Anderson and Walt Sentyrz, owner of Sentyrz Liquor and grocery on an early-October volunteer installation event. Metro Blooms board member Lori Anderson and Walt Sentyrz, owner of Sentyrz Liquor and grocery on an early-October volunteer installation event.

With a grant from the Mississippi Watershed Management Organization, Metro Blooms worked with Sentyrz Liquor and Grocery to install raingardens to capture 100 percent of the rain water that lands on this site.

That means – in a one-inch rainfall – nearly 14,000 gallons of stormwater that used to pollute the Mississippi River are now directed into raingardens.



Linden Hills Neighborhood of Raingardens

Pamela Jewson with her husband (left) and Metro Blooms designer Sam Geer (right), as they begin installation of Pamela's garden on one of the last beautiful days in October of 2010 Pamela Jewson with her husband (left) and Metro Blooms designer Sam Geer (right), as they begin installation of Pamela's garden on one of the last beautiful days in October of 2010

In June of 2010, Pamela Jewson became our 5000th raingarden workshop attendee. To celebrate this milestone, Metro Blooms – along with the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District and EcoScapes Landscaping - gave Pamela a free raingarden installation.

In 2011, the Linden Hills Environment Committee is offering the first 50 property owners 50% off on an onsite consult and raingarden design. Of these property owners, 30 will be eligible for a free raingarden excavation and $75 native plant reimbursement grants in 2012.

- Sign up now by scheduling a consultation. Call Deb at 651-698-1390.

See a slideshow from the installation on our Facebook page



Bob & Debbie Wolk's 50th Anniversary

Image from Southwest Journal Image from Southwest Journal

Bob and Debbie Wolk live on the 5100 block of James Avenue South in Minneapolis – a block that slopes downhill to Minnehaha Creek. When it rains, a torrent of water runs down the street. Untreated, this water is the biggest environmental threat to the creek, adding pollution, causing algae blooms, and increasing bank erosion.

Years ago, Bob and Debbie installed a rain garden to do their part to hold back this polluted water from the creek. After all, Debbie is a Hennepin County Master Gardener, and Bob is a Metro Blooms board member. They are very familiar with the value of raingardens in protecting our lakes and streams.

Then, in 2009, Bob and Debbie took the next step – and it was a big one. To celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary, Bob and Debbie offered to install raingardens for any neighbors on the block who would have one. Eleven neighbors took them up on the offer, and one Sunday late in May, 150 anniversary well-wishers and raingarden enthusiasts showed up to help install native plants in these eleven raingardens.

Since then, Bob and Debbie have worked with their grandkids to write and deliver raingarden newsletters to their neighbors, and have worked to help neighbors maintain their new raingardens. Thanks to Bob and Debbie, their block is more beautiful, neighbors are more connected with one another, and Minnehaha Creek takes in less untreated stormwater.



Victory Cleveland Neighborhood of Raingardens

Victory Cleveland Neighborhood of Raingardens

When Debbie Nelson from the Victory and Cleveland Neighborhood Associations in North Minneapolis heard about Metro Blooms Powderhorn Lake Project, she approached Metro Blooms to do a smaller-scale version in her two neighborhoods. Funded by the City of Minneapolis and the Victory and Cleveland Neighborhood Associations, this project installed 30 raingardens in various locations throughout the two neighborhoods. To receive a free raingarden, residents had to initially sign up and attend the Raingarden Workshop held at Lucy Craft Laney School in Minneapolis. The first 30 residents who attended were offered a free raingarden. The installation occurred in three phases. First, raingarden onsite consultations and designs were done by Metro Blooms LandscapeDesigners at all locations. Second, upon completion of the designs, Metro Blooms Landscape Designers and staff from the Minnesota Conservation Corps (MCC) excavated and prepared the raingardens for planting. Third, homeowners were responsible for purchasing discounted native plants and cultivars and planting them in their own raingardens based on the design layout.

See a slideshow on our Facebook page


Schmidt Lake Neighborhood of Raingardens

Victory Cleveland Neighborhood of Raingardens

In 2010 residents of northern neighborhoods surrounding Schmidt Lake learned how the stormwater runoff from their properties is contributing to mid-summer algae blooms in Schmidt Lake. Seven residents partnered with Metro Blooms, the City of Plymouth, Conservation Corps of Minnesota, and Hennepin County to install raingardens and shoreline buffers. In 2011 residents in all neighborhoods around the lake will again have the opportunity to receive assistance in protecting the waters of Schmidt Lake.

 


Irving Triangle Park

In 2011, Metro Blooms formed a partnership with the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board, the Pohlad Foundation, the Jordan Area Community Coalition, and the Mississippi River Green Team.   Here we converted a small triangle of Park Board property in North Minneapolis into a planted public space that is still usable for recreation, but also increases space for bird habitat and serves as a usable outdoor education tool for the local community. 

The planting plan was designed with three goals in mind: 1) it should be able to withstand the intense snow-plowing regime around the edges of the park 2) provide plants that are staples to a bird's foraging needs throughout the year 3) create a design of purely native species that both lend themselves to a neat and composed design as well as withstand the pressures of foot traffic and nearb recreation.

 

 


Bryn Mawr Neighborhood of Raingardens

In 2010, Metro Blooms formed a partnership with the Bryn Mawr Neighborhood Association, The Bassett Creek Watershed District, and the City of Minneapolis to design and install cost-shared raingardens for residents, churches, businesses, and townhome associaitons of the Bryn Mawr neighborhood.  Metro Blooms installed 18 of the 30 gardens, while some homeowners chose to install the gardens themselves (and still take part in the cost-share).  We will be finishing the installations in early 2012.