Improvements
to play and park features as well as underground drainage began today at the
Glen Park playground at the Capuano Early Childhood Center in East Somerville,
announced Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone.
Funded by a
$350,000 federal Community Development Block Grant, the visible park
improvements include a new poured-in-place rubber play surface and subsurface,
new light fixtures near the drop-off area, and a new metal picket fence gate to
replace the chain-link fence gate. Additional shade trees will also be planted,
and existing play equipment will be repaired and painted with fresh new colors.
Meanwhile, below ground, drainage system improvements will be made to reduce
puddling on the playground.
“Providing
our children with appealing, safe and fun parks isn’t a luxury, it’s an
essential part of making sure our kids are healthy, active and developing
strong minds,” said Mayor Curtatone. “We’ve built or renovated more than 25
parks and green spaces over the past seven years, because we want to invite
residents of all ages out of their homes and into our city’s valued open
spaces. Glen Park will be both a safer and more welcoming play area for
children and a communal space where parents and neighbors can meet one another,
relax and strengthen neighborhood bonds.”
The Glen Park
improvements are among a string of recent and upcoming park projects in East
Somerville. In July, the new Chuckie Harris Park opened on Cross Street East.
Built on a formerly paved lot, this innovative park features a giant slide, a
water spray, community garden plots, café tables, swings, a toddler play area,
and more than 70 new trees in a completely ADA accessible space. The new East
Somerville Community School, which opens Sept. 4, has three new outdoor play
areas on site including fields and state-of-the-art play equipment. The new
Baxter Waterfront Park in Assembly Square slated to open in September offers a
new dock and six acres of waterfront green space and pathways crowned by a
central amphitheater for outdoor performances, as well as a sculpture to be
installed later this year designed by Somerville youth artists through a new
partnership with Artists for Humanity. Finally, the first public meeting to
discuss the creation of Symphony Park on a vacant house lot at the corner of
Florence and Pearl Streets was held in July. The City is seeking grants to
design and build the park and, if successful, construction should begin in
summer 2014.
“Ward 1 is
home to more children than any other part of the city, and it’s so important
that our kids—and all of us for that matter— have welcoming and safe places to
play in our neighborhoods,” said Ward 1 Alderman Maureen Bastardi. “I’m really
looking forward to the reopening of Glen Park and to working with the community
and City planners to start discussing designs for Symphony Park.”
During
construction, the playground will be closed to the public. James McCarthy Field
at Capuano will remain open, but access at times may be available only from
Franklin Street. Weather permitting, Glen Park is expected to reopen by
mid-October.
For more
information on the Glen Park improvements, please contact OSPCD at 617-625-6600
ext 2500.
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