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Tag Archives: Parks/Recreation

Below are listed the articles tagged Parks/Recreation
  • 06 / Mar
    2009

Stansbury Park Redesign Considers Olmsted Original

Stansbury Park on Third Street, Current Conditions

Stansbury Park on Third Street, Current Conditions



The University of Louisville Foundation is working on plans to completely overhaul the triangular, 7-acre Stansbury Park across Third Street from the University of Louisville’s Belknap Campus.  Plans call for a major restoration of the park’s original turn-of-the-century Olmsted Brothers’ layout to connect the Belknap Campus with the rest of the community.  The project will cost an estimated $12.5 million and will begin once enough donations have been secured by the Foundation.


Originally called the Third Street Triangle and then Triangle Park, the refurbished Stansbury Park looks to build upon recent growth in the surrounding neighborhoods and will set the stage for future University development around the park.  With a new addition to the Speed Museum in the works, hundreds of new student housing units coming online this year, and plans for a mixed-use redevelopment of the Masterson’s block to the north, Stansbury Park could serve as the focal point for a growing area around the University.


Plans include extending Unity Place (first called Park Place and then Confederate Place) to restore the park’s triangular shape.  To do this, a mid-century dormitory built half-way in the park will be torn down.  A future building could house a University Inn and a restaurant facing the park with outdoor dining.  The master plan for Stansbury Park was created by Rowland Design of West Main Street and DLK Civic Design of Chicago for the U of L Foundation.


Pedestrian access and bike routes are also a major design concern for the project.  Unity Place will be closed at Second Street to enhance pedestrian safety and bike access to the University and the Olmsted-designed parkways beyond.  A bike pavilion could be located along Fourth Street and future transportation projects in the area will include additional bike lanes.  This is an especially welcome feature considering Mayor William Stansbury, for whom the park is named, was killed by a motorist while crossing Bardstown Road on his way to church in April 1985.  Later that year, the Board of Aldermen changed the park’s name from Triangle Park to Stansbury Park.


Click through to read more, see photos, original Olmsted layouts, and future park plans.

  • 24 / Feb
    2009

Studying Hogan Fountain & Tyler Park


Preliminary Plan for Tyler Park from 1907

Preliminary Plan for Tyler Park from 1907




Metro Parks and the Olmsted Conservancy held an information gathering session last night seeking input on Tyler Park and the Hogan Fountain area of Cherokee Park.  A $50,000 master plan will be created to guide development and restoration of the parks.  The plan will be carried out by a team of landscape architects, architects, and historic preservation landscape architects under the guidance of Heritage Landscapes of Vermont.  The meeting attempted to discern what works, what doesn’t work, and what should be added to the parks.


Much of the discussion involved pedestrian issues such as creating a focal point at Hogan Fountain with less asphalt paving.  The large “tee-pee” pavillion atop Bonnycastle Hill also occupied much of the discussion.  No one would step up and say they didn’t like the shelter or that it should be removed, but the sense that it didn’t belong in an Olmsted landscape persisted.  Many believed the shelter’s 50-year history in the park had earned it a place in the park.  Metro Parks officials pointed out many landscape design principles that define an Olmsted park and discussed how large architectural features such as the tee-pee were generally discouraged.  The building was designed by local architects Tafel & Schickli.


We believe there is ample room for improvement at both Tyler Park and Hogan Fountain, especially relating to place-making and pedestrian issues.  Tyler Park, for one, could use more defined street parking and, of course, sidewalks.  The tennis courts and play areas are scattered haphazardly throughout the site, so some organization would be in order, too.  In a perfect world, we’d also like to see a picnic pavillion, perhaps terminating Tyler Parkway forming a grand entry into the park.


Cherokee Park’s Hogan Fountain area suffers from similar disorganization of uses and we would like to see the area immediately surrounding the fountain start to take on its own identity apart from a monument sitting in the middle of the Scenic Loop.  More large trees around the “tee-pee” could also help, too.  First and foremost at both locations, though, are sidewalks (especially along Cherokee Road and Castlewood Avenue).  If you can’t safely walk to the park from the neighborhoods in the first place, then little else matters.


Only a plan is being generated now, and Metro Parks won’t start a project until all funds are in the bank, so this is a long term project, but improving Louisville’s Olmsted parks large and small can only be a good thing.

  • 23 / Oct
    2008

Wasteland No More: The Greening Of Waterfront Park (Phase III)

Future Site Of Lincoln Statue

Future Site Of Lincoln Statue



Waterfront Park has undoubtedly been a major boon to revitalizing Louisville’s urban neighborhoods, but the eastern and western phases of the park still remain divided by hundreds of feet of chain link fence as construction continues on some of the most dramatic features of the entire park system: the Big Four Bridge and the Lincoln Memorial.  It’s been a long and arduous process to move from the industrial wasteland that once comprised Louisville’s waterfront to the nationally acclaimed park that exists now, but the wait has well been worth it.  The final 13 acres of the 85 acre project are scheduled to be phased in over the next couple of years and will finally unite the park into one community jewel.



Masterplan for Phase III

Masterplan for Phase III (Rendering Courtesy Waterfront Development Corporation)



We took a tour of the estimated $22 million construction site as the grass is beginning to grow and the heavy construction is starting to heat up.  Peering through the fence at the park’s signature sculpted hills reveals only a portion of the inner workings of the site.  The articulation of the river’s edge is far in the distance and the Lincoln Memorial is all but hidden from view.  Landscape architects Hargreaves & Associates of San Francisco have shown how skillfully they can articulate space in Phase I and II of the park, and one must experience the new spaces from all angles to appreciate their full complexity.  Once within the confines of the construction fence, the true intricacy of the park begins to be made apparent.



Waterfront Park Construction

Waterfront Park Construction



Walking along the riverfront from the west, a granite amphitheater appears from behind a sculpted earthen berm.  Next spring, a larger than life Abraham Lincoln will be perched atop a massive boulder intently gazing down the river.  (His general glance will be fixed on the third pier of the Kennedy Bridge, we’re told.)  The Lincoln Memorial has been designed to be an experiential journey past four bas reliefs depicting scenes of Lincoln’s life in Kentucky, wrapping around the gentle curve of the amphitheater until the visitor is confronted by the former president himself sculpted by renowned local artist Ed Hamilton.  The surrounding berm shields the memorial from the rest of the park, essentially wrapping around the site and embracing the micro-landscape.  According to the Waterfront Development Corporation, the Lincoln Memorial “teaches about his connections to Kentucky and about how, as a young man, he developed his abhorrence of slavery while standing on the banks of the Ohio River in Louisville.”  The space has the potential to be a deeply moving one.





You’ll want to click through, there are dozens of park photos just ahead (and more to read!)

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