[Vision2020] Playfields
Tom Ivie
the_ivies3 at yahoo.com
Wed Dec 7 13:45:28 PST 2005
Jeff,
A couple of points you made stood out to me. Specifically, in number 3 you mention skateboarding. I don't remember there being a skateboard feature to this big park, but it is an excellent idea. Maybe even a rock climbing feature (Moscow Rocks!) and a frisbee golf course. We should remember that not all athletes play soccer, baseball, football, etc. Many do, but they also cross-over, ie. football and rock climbing, or, soccer/baseball and skateboarding for example. It has been awhile since I saw the plan for the park, did it have any basketball hoops? If not, it should. The park would be made even better by your recommendation in number 4. A trail that off-shoots from the main Paradise Path to the park would give better access, and probably safer access, for kids and adults alike. -Tom
Jeff Harkins <jeffh at moscow.com> wrote:
After watching the "playfield issue" for several weeks now, some observations:
1. Youth sports activities are an important element of a family
oriented community. Having survived youth soccer for several years
(as a licensed coach, licensed referee, soccer association board
member and co-founder of the Palouse 5-a-side soccer tournament), I
can easily attest to the importance of additional playfields to meet
the demand for youth and community activities. Hours and hours of
negotiation with Parks and Rec, U of I, and churches were necessary
to find marginal practice and play areas for youth soccer. Similar
negotiations were necessary for community members involved in
softball, baseball, cross country, etc. There are more youth
involved in those activities today than there were when I was
actively participating.
2. With youth soccer, the N. Idaho league is very-well established
(Coeur d'Alene, Post Falls, Tri-Cities, Lewiston, Spokane). Our
facilities are not on a par with those communities against which the
Moscow teams compete. New soccer fields would help to increase the
number of venues we are able to host here. That not only benefits
our local businesses (and gets young folks in proximity to U of I,
but also helps our local parents - additional fields could make it
possible for our teams to host a few more venues so our parents and
kids have a few less trips out of town. I have heard from numerous
parents, whose kids are involved in other active team sports,
expressing similar views.
3. My former residence (Conestoga Dr) is just up the hill from the
proposed location and I am quite familiar with the terrain/proximity
issues. The proposed location would seem to be ideally suited to
allow the hundreds of young folks and active adults in the Frontier
and adjacent neighborhoods easy access to a large playfield. It would
be a site well-suited to anecdoctal frisbee playing, tag, pickup
games, skateboarding, etc. in addition to active team sports. It
also has great visibility from Palouse River Drive so activities of
the young folks would be observable. Coincidentally, I vividly
recall how important the development of the small park - just east of
proposed site - was to the neighborhood. Dozens of neighbors worked
to make that small strip park happen. But that site is ill-equipped
to handle the more active youth team sports.
4. The site location would lend itself to development of a bike trail
extension - connecting with the existing trail system - this would
likely have great appeal to the community.
5. Moscow is very well suited to handling a couple of hundred
visitors for a youth team event. After all, our community hosts a
number of athletic events weekly that attract thousands of visitors
(UI team sports)- and it doesn't seem to affect the overall ambiance
of our life here in a college town. Quite the contrary, it seems to
energize our community. If there are concerns about traffic flow,
then bring some of our local civil engineers in to reframe the
access/egress issues. But the limited amount of traffic involved,
relative to the traffic issues that are presented in that
neighborhood during football weekends is seemingly trivial.
6. The sound system issue seems quite easy to resolve. We have
numerous sound engineers in the community - engage them to design and
test various configurations and measure the decibel levels in the
neighboring areas. I am quite confident that the sound level can be
designed to specifications that would produce sound at levels far
below other noise systems (Greek Row, Kibbie Dome, etc.).
I cannot help but think about the success of the LCSC participation
in baseball and the benefits that venue has provided to the Lewiston
area. I have visited their baseball stadium (a far more extensive
facility than proposed here) and have walked the neighborhood around
their facility. The noise emanating from that facility is far less
than the noise levels imposed on East City Park neighbors numerous
times a year. But, the benefits of all those folks having fun far
outweigh the costs imposed by their facility - it seems likely that a
similar experience could be had here.
7. I am quite surprised by the "Arboretum issue". The Arboretum is
not a private park intended for only a designated segment of the
Moscow community. It is a public facility that is intended to
educate the public about the importance of managed green space
areas. Providing visitors to our community close proximity to the
Arboretum, especially young people, helps to expose them to the
importance of the green-space resource. A playfield space adjacent
to the Arboretum provides an opportunity to extend the Arboretum into
the playfield area. This may be our best chance to develop our own
version of a "Julia Davis" resource.
But, bottom line, the Arboretum is a shared resource and the more we
can share it, the more people will learn from it and respect it - and
more than likely provide resources to continue its development. The
proposed athletic facility would offer the Arboretum an opportunity
to extend the managed "green space" to include a river/stream ecosystem. Wow!
8. Finally, consider the long-term development of the Palouse River
Drive area. It is not a matter of whether that area will develop,
but how and what will find its way into that corridor. Placing a
large "green space" there can be a significant footprint that will
impact that neighborhood in very positive ways. For example, if the
95 bypass can be constructed just west of there (along the ID/WA
border), traffic issues are now routed away from this site. Access
would be convenient for all. Industrial development would be
curtailed or at least divided/segmented.
The proposed project warrants approval - amend what needs to be
amended to deal with pertinent issues - and get the facility into play.
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