First Day Walk

Pine Street neighbor Stephenie Harrington is organizing a ‘First Day Walk’. From her announcement:

Tuesday, January 1st
10am

Meet at gazebo on S. Pine St, we plan to head over to Belle Island promptly at 10 o’clock. Kids, strollers and dogs on leashes welcome. Please comment below or message me if you plan to join us.
We may get some sprinkles but forecast looks quite warm.
Happy New Year!

By the way, if you are planning something further away- you may want to check out this post on the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation’s website about Virginia State Parks First Day Hikes 2019.

New Benches For Our Parks

OHNA President Todd Woodson shared the good news:

The Tool Bank’s Toby Vernon, the City’s Vicki Campbell and I unloaded 6 beautiful new picnic tables built by volunteers with materials paid for by the Tool Bank into Oregon Hill Parks this morning. 2 in Pleasants Park, 2 in Holly St Playground and 2 in Samuel Parsons Linear Park.

Letter On Monroe Park

Cherry Street neighbor (and Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association President) has a letter to the editor in today’s Times Dispatch.

Editor, Times-Dispatch:

Less than three months after reopening, Monroe Park is showing signs of massive design failures that need immediate remedial attention. The 22-month renovation took much longer than anticipated and came in way over budget, costing about $1 million an acre.

What will it cost to address these egregious planning blunders? The destruction of a significant portion of a wonderfully healthy tree canopy and other design and construction errors have caused the pathways to erode, sending large amounts of gravel dust into the sewer system where it will inevitably end up in the James River. The Sierra Club’s Fall of the James chapter has called the newly made-over park an environmental disaster. One of Richmond’s most popular gathering places, the renovation removed all public restroom facilities and the 1945 World War II memorial was desecrated by an ugly electrical apparatus. Large puddles of standing water languish on damaged lawns where there was never a problem before.

It didn’t need to be like this. A wonderful master plan was crafted and adopted by City Council but was tossed in favor of turning over the park by lease to a corporation weighted heavily by institutional and large corporate interests. Bad logic prevailed, removing the trees as well as a designated resource area for children. Funny that in the past, the Redskins Training Center also lost a significant portion of desirable tree canopy and in an amazing public letter of apology, then-Mayor Dwight Jones expressed contrition for that error.

Mayor Stoney has shown discomfort over the situation in Monroe Park but says he inherited the situation. Now the same planning firm that worked on Monroe Park is working on plans for the historic Pump House. Can we really afford more bad decisions with this architectural masterpiece?

Charles Woodson

Richmond

Even today, as seen from the VCU Ram Cam (photo above), the grass in Monroe Park still bears the scars of the corporate tents from almost a year ago. Again, Woodson and the Sierra Club ask for a comprehensive tree planting schedule to replace the destroyed canopy in the entire park. And bigger questions still remain- what happened to the public restrooms? How has $7.5 million been spent?

Bollards, More Bollards

Not sure if government officials, Conservancy board members, or the local media will ignore this or dismiss it as more ‘whining’, but Cherry Street neighbor Todd Woodson is still keeping an eye on Monroe Park. Here is the latest, which also goes back to his very poignant warning back in 2017:

Four bollards were destroyed and concrete curbing broken at Main and Belvidere in Monroe Park last night. This bollard style, made by Robinson Iron, was installed in the park around 2005 by the Monroe park advisory council despite the expense but were soon found to have a design flaw with the welds resulting in them all being destroyed by the time the park closed. The “conservancy” would have known this if they had complied with their 2014 agreement with council to add community stakeholders to their board, and then the city wouldn’t be facing this substantial expense. I’ve asked the city govt to make the “conservancy” bear the replacement and repair costs. We’ll see who pays the cost…