Minnehaha Falls Visitors June 2024
June 2024 — Visitors at th bottom of Minnehaha Falls in Minneapolis in June 2024.
Explore photos tagged Park.
June 2024 — Visitors at th bottom of Minnehaha Falls in Minneapolis in June 2024.
June 2024 — A man fishes at the bottom of Minnehaha Falls in Minneapolis.
June 2024 — Minnehaha Falls in Minneapolis on June 23rd 2024 after days of rain.
June 2024 — Reflections at downtown Minneapolis's Peavey Plaza.
June 2024 — Reflections at downtown Minneapolis's Peavey Plaza.
March 2023 — Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden has long served as one of Tokyo’s largest and most historically layered urban parks, transitioning from an Edo-period feudal estate to an Imperial garden before opening to the public after World War II. This March 2023 view reflects the quiet season just before cherry blossoms begin to emerge, when the garden’s network of footpaths, streams, and wooded slopes show more of their underlying structure. Morning light filters through leafless trees onto a narrow waterway lined with timber edging—an example of the garden’s blend of traditional Japanese landscape elements and early modern design introduced during its redevelopment in the early 20th century. In the distance, visitors walk among early-blooming shrubs with Shinjuku’s skyline rising beyond the treetops, underscoring the park’s role as a transitional space between dense city life and calm, curated nature.
March 2023 — Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden offers a calm, expansive contrast to the dense urban core that surrounds it. Originally part of a feudal estate in the Edo period and later a botanical garden under the Imperial Household Agency, Shinjuku Gyoen opened to the public in 1949 and remains one of Tokyo’s most significant landscaped parks. In this March 2023 photograph, the garden’s central pond reflects late-winter trees and early seasonal light, while the tiered silhouette of the NTT Docomo Yoyogi Building rises prominently in the background. The juxtaposition underscores how Shinjuku Gyoen functions as a large green refuge within one of the busiest districts in Tokyo, blending historical landscape design with the city’s modern skyline.
July 2022 — A bright magenta-and-red “PARK” marquee glows above 5th Street in downtown Minneapolis, its arrow pointing toward one of the city’s long-running parking ramps. The large mirrored surface on the right captures a full duplicate of the sign, emphasizing the heavy neon presence that once defined the downtown entertainment and retail district. Signs like this were installed in the mid-20th century as automobile traffic surged and developers converted older commercial buildings into multi-level garages to serve Nicollet Mall, the Gateway renewal area, and the growing high-rise core. At street level, the rows of construction barrels and lane closures reflect Minneapolis’s ongoing cycle of roadway and transit upgrades — a pattern familiar in this part of the city as utility work, sidewalk rebuilds, and streetcar-era infrastructure get modern replacements. Even with the constant change, the surviving neon parking signs remain some of the most recognizable visual anchors of the nighttime downtown streetscape.
June 2022 — A park in South Minneapolis.
July 2021 — Mill Ruins Park near downtown Minneapolis with Canadian wildfire smoke.
January 2021 — Around 40 were arrested after participating in a annual nationwide "Noise Demonstration" calling for the abolishing of prisons and standing in solidarity with those incarcerated.
January 2021 — Around 40 were arrested after participating in a annual nationwide "Noise Demonstration" calling for the abolishing of prisons and standing in solidarity with those incarcerated.
January 2021 — Around 100 in Minneapolis joined a NYE nationwide call for protest supporting those imprisoned by the state. After the jail was spray-painted Minneapolis Police, State Patrol, Golden Valley PD, Hennepin Sheriffs, & state aerial surveillance descended on the area to arrest dozens.
July 2020 — Signs on a tree located near the entrance to the Powderhorn East homeless encampment in South Minneapolis. The encampment was cleared by Minneapolis Police on July 21, 2020.