
Garrison Trotter Neighborhood Association President Louis Elisa (right) examines a map of Franklin Park.
Nearly
200 people gathered at the Franklin Park golf clubhouse last week for a
public meeting aimed at ironing out a plan for a $28 million investment
in improvements to what many describe as the crowning jewel of the
Emerald Necklace park system.
The
city of Boston’s $102 million sale of the Winthrop Square garage
provided the funding for the park’s planned renovation. The details of
that renovation, however, are yet to be worked out. The Jan. 28 meeting
was the first in a series of planned meetings to develop a new master
plan for Franklin Park.
“We’ve
not made any decisions,” said Lauren Bryant, a project manager for the
city’s Parks Department. “We didn’t come into this process with any
pre-conceived ideas.”
There
is one idea city officials plan to implement: creating a $5 million
endowment that would fund additional park maintenance positions.
Currently there are just three maintenance workers for the 280 acres
under Parks Department jurisdiction.
A
smaller portion of the $28 million will go to the landscape architects,
planners, ecologists and community engagement experts who are
developing the master plan. The process for developing the master plan
will include three more community workshops, during which the planners
will solicit community input, as well as informational events. The
planning team also will rely on the results of an online survey of park
users to guide the development of the master plan.
Park history and uses
When
the park was originally designed by noted landscape architect Frederick
Law Olmsted in the 1890s, the vision was for a country park in the
middle of the city. In the following decades, however, portions of the
500-acre park were separated for
specialized
activities. The greatest portion of the park is given over to the
William J. Devine Golf Course, which occupies 100 acres. The Franklin
Park Zoo, Shattuck Hospital and a Parks Department maintenance yard also
occupy parts of the park.
Current
uses of the public spaces include sporting events in the Playstead
area, such as soccer, cricket and cross-country races, and football and
track events in White Stadium. Cultural events in the past year included
the Caribbean Carnival, the BAMS music festival and Roxbury Homecoming.
Many at the meeting said that day-to-day, they use the park for exercise and recreation.
“I bring my grandchildren to the zoo,” Roxbury resident Angela Williams told the Banner.
District 6 City Councilor Matt O’Malley, who jogs in Franklin Park, said the planning process could be transformative.
“This
is the biggest investment Franklin Park has undergone,” he said. “If
done right, it could make Franklin Park rival Central Park. We can
really make it one of the best parks in the country.”
Mattapan
Neighborhood Council Chair Fatima Ali-Salaam said the success of the
planning process will depend largely on how well the planners solicit
community input.
“This could be a model for how parks of this size can be integrated into the fabric of the community,” she said.
Franklin
Park received historical landmark status in 1980, Bryant noted.
Therefore, any major changes to the park would have to go through the
city’s Landmarks Commission. Additionally, changes to Scarboro Pond
would have to be reviewed by the city’s Conservation Commission.
The
master plan currently under development will be the third the park has
undergone in the last 40 years. Earlier plans were drawn up in 1980 and
1990.
Landscape
Architect John Kett, a managing partner at the firm Reed-Hilderbrand,
which is consulting on the project, cautioned that while the $28 million
allocated to the park can go a long way toward making it more welcoming
to users, it will not radically alter the park.
“Twenty-eight million sounds like a lot,” he said. “It will go very quickly.”
ON THE WEB
For more information: franklinparkmasterplan.com