State Street Miyabe Maple
The Tough, Salt-Tolerant Street Maple for Minnesota Boulevards
State Street Miyabe Maple (Acer miyabei 'Morton') is a Morton Arboretum introduction of the rare Miyabe maple — a remarkably tough, urban-tolerant tree that thrives in the alkaline, compacted, and salty soils where Norway and red maples often struggle. It forms a dense, uniform oval crown of clean dark-green leaves that turn golden yellow in fall, and it's hardy through USDA zone 4. Whether you're lining a boulevard in Minneapolis, replacing a lost ash on a tight street strip in St. Paul, or planting a dependable shade tree in a new Woodbury subdivision, State Street is built for hard sites.
State Street Miyabe Maple Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
| Scientific Name | Acer miyabei 'Morton' (STATE STREET) |
| Common Names | State Street Miyabe Maple, Miyabe Maple |
| Mature Height | 40–50 feet |
| Mature Width | 30–40 feet |
| Growth Rate | Moderate — about 1–2 feet per year in Minnesota |
| Sun | Full sun to part shade |
| Water | Moderate. Tolerates average rainfall once established; appreciates consistent moisture while young. |
| USDA Zones | 4–7 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a) |
| Soil | Exceptionally adaptable — tolerates alkaline (high-pH), compacted, and clay soils that defeat many maples. Prefers deep, well-drained loam but handles tough urban ground. |
| Foliage | Deciduous — clean dark-green leaves, dense oval crown |
| Fall Color | Golden yellow |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliably hardy through USDA zone 4 — proven in Twin Cities winters |
| Deer Resistance | Moderately deer-resistant; protect the trunk from buck rub the first 2 winters |
| Salt Tolerance | Good — one of the better maples for road-salt and boulevard exposure |
| Native Status | Not native — the species is native to Japan; 'Morton' is a hardy Morton Arboretum (Illinois) selection |
State Street Miyabe Maple Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Boulevard and Street Tree
This is the use State Street was bred for. Its tolerance of compacted, alkaline, salt-laden soil and its tidy, uniform oval crown make it one of the best maples for Twin Cities boulevards and parking-lot islands. It holds up where Norway and red maples decline, and its predictable shape lines a street beautifully.
Tough-Site Shade Tree
For the hard corners of a property — heavy clay, high-pH fill soil near a foundation, or a hot west-facing lot — State Street delivers reliable shade where fussier trees fail. It's an excellent emerald-ash-borer replacement on difficult ground in Bloomington and Eden Prairie.
Formal and Repeated Plantings
Because the crown is so uniform, State Street works well in matched pairs flanking a drive or in an allee where consistency matters. The golden-yellow fall color reads cleanly against brick and stone.
Best Time to Plant State Street Miyabe Maple in Minnesota
Plant in spring (late April–May, after the ground thaws) for a full season of establishment, or in early fall (late August–early October) while the soil is still warm. Get it in the ground at least six weeks before the ground freezes — typically mid-November in the Twin Cities. Avoid mid-summer planting in heat and humidity, and never plant after mid-October or before spring thaw.
How to Plant State Street Miyabe Maple
- Dig wide, not deep — 2–3x the root ball width but only as deep as the ball is tall, so the root flare sits at or slightly above grade.
- Check for clay hardpan — if water pools and won't drain, break through the clay layer or mound-plant slightly to improve drainage.
- Backfill with the native soil mixed with 20–30% compost; don't build a pure-compost "container" the roots won't grow beyond.
- Spacing — give a single specimen 25–30 feet of clearance; space a boulevard row or allee 30–40 feet apart.
- Build a 3–4 inch watering ring to direct water to the roots, then flatten it before winter so it doesn't trap ice.
- Mulch with 2–3 inches of shredded bark or wood chips in a wide ring, kept 2 inches off the trunk. Never use gravel mulch in Minnesota — it doesn't insulate roots.
Watering State Street Miyabe Maple in Minnesota
First Year Watering Schedule
Weeks 1–2: water deeply and slowly every 1–2 days. Month 1–2: every 3–4 days. Month 3–6: every 5–7 days during active growth, easing off when rainfall is adequate (the Twin Cities average about 3 inches a month from June through August). Stop watering 2–3 weeks before the ground freezes — usually late October — so the tree doesn't push tender growth heading into winter.
After Year One
An established State Street is low-maintenance, needing supplemental water only during extended droughts (two-plus weeks with no rain and temps above 80°F). Soak deeply to 8–12 inches every 7–14 days during dry spells and let natural rainfall handle the rest.
Will State Street Miyabe Maple survive a Minnesota winter? Yes. It's rated to USDA zone 4 and has proven reliably hardy in Twin Cities winters. Wrap the young trunk the first winter to prevent sunscald and buck rub.
How fast does it grow here? At a moderate pace — roughly 1–2 feet per year in good Minnesota soil. It's not as fast as a red maple, but it trades speed for toughness and a far more uniform, dependable form.
Is it native to Minnesota? No — the Miyabe maple species is native to Japan. 'Morton' is a cold-hardy selection from the Morton Arboretum in Illinois, chosen specifically for tough Midwest urban conditions.
Does it tolerate clay and high-pH soil? Yes — better than most maples. State Street was selected for exactly these conditions and handles alkaline, compacted Twin Cities clay-loam that causes leaf yellowing in red and Norway maples.
Can I plant it near the road with salt spray? Yes. State Street is one of the more salt-tolerant maples, which is a big part of why it's such a strong boulevard and street-side choice.
You May Also Like
- Red Sunset Red Maple — a fast-growing maple with brilliant, reliable orange-red fall color.
- Inferno Sugar Maple — a sugar maple selected for fiery orange-red fall color and strong upright form.
- Green Mountain Sugar Maple — a heat- and drought-tougher sugar maple with dependable orange-gold fall color.
- Skyline Honeylocust — a tough, fine-textured shade tree that also handles compacted urban soil and casts light, dappled shade.
- Swamp White Oak — a durable, clay- and moisture-tolerant native shade tree for hard sites.
How Many State Street Miyabe Maple Do I Need?
State Street is a specimen and street tree. Give a single tree 25–30 feet of clearance from buildings and other large trees so the uniform oval crown develops evenly. For a boulevard row or allee — where its consistency really shines — space trees 30–40 feet on center; a matched pair flanking a driveway looks best at 30+ feet apart.
State Street Miyabe Maple Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: Small yellow-green flowers appear with the emerging leaves as the dense oval crown leafs out cleanly.
- Summer: A tidy canopy of dark-green foliage stays healthy through heat, drought, and compacted urban soil — no mid-summer yellowing like stressed Norway or red maples.
- Fall: Dependable golden-yellow color that reads beautifully against brick and stone.
- Winter: A uniform, well-balanced branch structure with corky-textured bark on maturing trunks — handsome and storm-resistant.
At a Glance
✔ Salt-Tolerant ✔ Drought-Tolerant ✔ Shade-Tolerant
Plant It With
- Red Sunset Red Maple — fast orange-red fall color to contrast State Street's gold.
- Inferno Sugar Maple — fiery upright sugar maple for the better soil elsewhere on the lot.
- Skyline Honeylocust — fine-textured partner that handles the same compacted urban ground.
- Swamp White Oak — durable native for the wetter, heavier corners of a hard site.
Is State Street Miyabe Maple Right for Your Yard?
Choose State Street for the tough spots — alkaline or compacted clay, road-salt exposure, hot boulevard strips — where you still want a true maple with a clean, uniform crown and golden fall color. It's not a fit if you're after blazing red autumn color or the fastest possible shade: it turns gold, not red, and grows at a moderate 1–2 feet a year.