At a recent meeting of the Friends of Lick Creek Park, David
Schmitz from the City of College Station Parks Department described the plans
to finish the design and start construction of a Nature Center at Lick Creek
Park. This center was part of the long-term master plan and a bond for the
construction was approved by voters in 2008.
After enduring the economic
downturn, the City is ready to allocate the funds to build the building. At this time, there are no hard and fast plans for the buildings and structures- David Schmitz presented several renderings made by the architectural firm (below), but final plans won't be made until City Council OKs it.
We at
RBAS, as well as the birding community in the Brazos Valley and beyond, realize the uniqueness of
LCP as a birding hotspot (187 birds in Ebird) and prime habitat for birds year
round- from nesting neotropic migrants, to over wintering sparrows and towhees.
We use the park formally for our monthly Birding 101 program, BioBlitz with
TAMU in April, North American Migratory Bird count in May, North American Butterfly Count in July, and the Christmas Bird Count in December. Not to
mention all of the times we go out as individuals to get into a natural, wooded area. In addition to our uses, TPWD recognizes LCP as a hotspot on their
Birding Trails List along with other important
birding destinations across the state. So what’s going to happen? A lot of good things I think...
What is planned?
There are a lot of details still in the air, as City Council
hasn’t given final go ahead to generate specific plans- but we do have some ballpark
rendering to give us an idea:
- Expanded parking
- LEED certified building (potentially)
- Indoor and outdoor classrooms
- Restrooms
- Storage for classroom materials
- Office for staff
- WiFi?
- Pond?
- Butterfly gardens? With an emphasis on Monarchs (milk
weed)?
Rendering of potential LCP Nature Center and parking area |
Side-view of LCP Nature Center |
Other notes:
- Building sight and expanded new parking lot will tie in to
current parking lot
- Current chimney swift tower, butterfly gardens, and memorial
bench will be untouched
- They are planning on having a capacity of 60-100 people
for a class (think school field trips)
- Some lighting will have to go in, but they are conscious
of the stars and darkness
- Central open air breezeway will have some displays (flat
poster types)
- Rain water harvesting and solar power are planned
- ADA compliant
Blow-out view of Nature Center- classroom/storage on left, facilities and office on right, breezeway in middle |
Side-view of Nature Center |
Outdoor teaching space and storage |
So what is RBAS’s roll in this?
We have the opportunity to provide our knowledge and
expertise to help the City in the implementation of their plans. In teaming
with Friends of Lick Creek, Brazos Valley Texas Master Naturalist , and potentially others, we will be able to have a conversation with the City
to help work in some of the ideas, desires, wants and needs that we see as
valuable.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The knowledge base that our groups bring together has significant
breadth and depth- we have the people that know the things that make a center
like this work- and what would work for this specific center in this specific
place. We need those voices- the people that use and enjoy this park the most- to share their ideas- what would we like to have?
Where would we like to have it? How much? Too much? More? When? What can we do
to help?
Firstly, we will need people to show up to the City Council
meeting when this item comes before the board to voice our support for the
project.
As for the bigger question of what can we contribute to this
project and what do we want this park/Nature Center to look like… Well? It’s up to us to get our ideas organized and start the conversation
with them before the planning is done.
Time is of the essence as we will need to collaborate with these other groups and speak to the City with more or less one voice. They are optimistic that they can get an up or down vote to go ahead with the bidding process in the coming month or two.
Leave a comment below with some of your ideas or things you would like to see at (or close by to) this facility (or
send an email to riobrazosaudubon@gmail.com if you have a lot on your mind).
As long as they don't start charging an entrance fee, looks good to me! Parking lot plows right through where the woodcocks are right now.
ReplyDeleteThat's an interesting point about the loss of space... particularly since most of that parking lot is probably grasses now. Maybe we could talk about some off-sets and recover an equal amount of land from the trees for grassland as we lose to the parking lot.
DeleteThe Dark Sky Association can assist on best types of lighting to minimize disruption of the night sky. http://www.darksky.org
ReplyDeleteThat's a good resource- I'll add it to the list
DeleteWhere is the city council meeting going to be?
ReplyDeleteThanks and I have a tremendous supply: How To House Renovation house renovation exterior
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