Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Shingle Creek Crossing, formerly Brookdale Center, is a regional shopping mall in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota. It became the third enclosed shopping mall in the Twin Cities, after Southdale Center and Apache Plaza. The mall opened in phases beginning with Phase One in March 1962 which included anchor stores Sears and JCPenney.
Upon leaving Saint Paul, the route travels through suburban Washington County and exits the state into Wisconsin between Lakeland, Minnesota, and Hudson, Wisconsin, while crossing the St. Croix River. Legally, the Minnesota section of I-94 is defined as unmarked Legislative Route 392 in the Minnesota Statutes § 161.12(4). [5]
Interstate 694 (I-694) is an east–west auxiliary Interstate Highway located in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area in the US state of Minnesota.The western terminus of the route is at its junction with I-94, I-494, and US Highway 52 (US 52) in Maple Grove.
Shingle Creek Crossing (previously Brookdale Center) Brooklyn Center: 2012 652,000 square feet (61,000 m 2) [23] Gatlin Development Company Shoppes at Knollwood (previously Knollwood Mall) St. Louis Park: 1955 456,554 square feet (42,000 m 2) [24] Gateway Knollwood, LLC Shops at Gateway North (previously North Branch Outlets) North Branch: 1992
Shingle Creek Crossing, a shopping center in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name.
The boundaries of Shingle Creek are 53rd Avenue North to the north, Humboldt Avenue North to the east, 49th Avenue North to the south, and Xerxes Avenue North to the west. [4] It is located in Ward 4, represented by council member LaTrisha Vetaw .
Brooklyn Center Transit Center (BCTC) is a transit center in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center, Minnesota. Owned and operated by Metro Transit, it is one of the busiest single boarding locations in the Twin Cities. The transit center is not a park and ride, but provides free 10-minute parking and free outdoor bike racks. [2]
Crossing Hiawatha Avenue, the route becomes Minnehaha Parkway. The road passes between Lakes Nokomis and Hiawatha, and then follows Minnehaha Creek to Lake Harriet . The Chain of Lakes includes seven parks, and its name dates back to the 19th century, when an article referred to "the chain of lakes which, 'like a necklace of diamond in settings ...