Landscape Architect & Specifier News

APR 2014

LASN is a photographically oriented, professional journal featuring topics of concern and state-of-the-art projects designed or influenced by registered Landscape Architects.

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(Continued on page 26) p l a y g ro u n d 22 Landscape Architect and Specifier News Above Quartz Park in Springfield, Ore., is a 3½-acre public space that doubles as the playground for a new school and serves residents in an expanding southeast section of the city. The park opened in October 2013 and includes play structures with slides, balancing and climbing elements; a basketball court; accessible swings and other amenities. Willamalane Park and Recreation District will manage the park until the school is completed. The southeast section of Springfield, Ore., is one of the few areas still available for housing development within the city's urban growth boundary. A comprehensive 20-year Park and Recreation plan completed in 2012 by the Willamalane Park and Recreation District identified southeast Springfield as underserved by neighborhood parks. The plan showed that residents were either a half-mile or more from a park or would have had to cross a high-speed parkway to reach a park. Since the area was slated for more housing development, the local school district, Springfield Public Schools, took a proactive approach and participated in the 2010 Qualified School Construction Bond (QSCB) program, a federal economic stimulus project that allowed the school district to purchase a 15-acre property and complete limited site development through a no-interest federal loan. The school district joined forces with Willamalane during the master planning process and combined their funding to develop a site for the future school and create a new 3½-acre neighborhood park for the community. The elements of the park, such as the playground, basketball court and play field, will also serve as the school's playground in the future. The property lies to the south of a residential area and just east of a busy parkway. It was outside of city limits and contained almost 10 acres of jurisdictional wetlands, so mitigation credits were purchased to offset areas where development occurred. Annexation of the site and a zoning change were required by the city, as were standard site review procedures. The project was not without its share of obstacles. The school district's QSCB funding had to be spent by July 2013, which was difficult because of the wetlands and wet climate conditions typical of springtime in Oregon's Willamette Valley. Challenges also arose while working to meet the goals of two different public agencies. Though only a portion of this site was developed as part of the park project, a master plan for the entire site was necessary to ensure enough space for the layout of the future school, parking and sports fields. Robertson|Sherwood|Architects' Scott Stolarczyk, AIA, led the design team, and Aaron Olsen, ASLA, of Cameron McCarthy Landscape Architecture and Planning, designed the park, except for the playground. Willamalane's project manager and landscape architect Nicole Ankeney sought playground design proposals from five manufacturers that were on Oregon's approved By Nicole Ankeney, RLA, Willamalane Park and Recreation District; Kyle Cavaness, LASN Parking on the Oregon Trail: Springfeld's Quartz Park 22-25.indd 22 3/25/14 3:31 PM

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