KC Parks News | Kanas City Parks & Recreation Department

KC Parks News

  1. Saturday Afternoon Race will Affect Downtown Traffic

    As a service to our residents, the City of Kansas City, Mo., sends occasional notices about temporary road closures due to outdoor races. This weekend will kick off the first race of 2014. The City hopes these notices will help residents better plan their weekends and avoid inconvenient road closures or delays.

    The City is notifying motorists that the Valentine-themed Cupid’s Undie Run will temporarily affect traffic in downtown Kansas City on Saturday, Feb. 15 from 2-2:45 p.m.

    The below roads will be closed during the race. Please note, police are prepared to allow motorists to cross the route when they deem it safe for the participants.

    Grand Boulevard, between 12th and 14th streets

    12th Street, between Grand Boulevard and Oak Street

    Oak Street, between 11th and 12th streets

    For more information on this race, visit http://www.cupidsundierun.com/city/kansas-city/.

    Please observe caution and obey all posted detours and barricades.

     

  2. KC Parks Innnovative Campaign Featured in National Publication

    “Park It Forward” Initiative Promotes Park and Recreation Month for Kansas City

    Published in the February 2014 issue of Parks & Recreation Magazine

    In August of 2012, the citizens of Kansas City, Missouri, passed a sales tax in support of Kansas City Parks and Recreation, a CAPRA-certified agency. Among other benefits, the tax explicitly called for funding revamped parks marketing materials and an updated website. As a result, the agency’s marketing department initiated a major rebranding campaign in the first quarter of 2013 — the first in more than five years.

    BillboardThe rebranding process included a completely redesigned website from the ground up; new print collateral; ad placements on everything from buses to billboards; enhanced social media efforts; and public relations for print, television and radio editorial. The process was completed in late spring of 2013, just in time for NRPA’s annual celebration of Park and Recreation Month in July.

    To highlight the monthlong celebration of America’s parks and to supplement the efforts of the rebranding process, the Kansas City Parks and Recreation marketing team initiated the “Park It Forward” campaign to drive additional traffic to the new website and its social media platforms via posts of myriad park activities.

    For each day of Park and Recreation Month, a corresponding “Adventure of the Day” was assigned that suggested a park-centric activity or facility. For instance, July 1 stated, “Have a million gallons of outdoor water fun at the Springs Aquatic Center in Tiffany Hills Park.” Each morning, the caption would be posted to Facebook and Twitter. In the afternoon, a team of park and recreation staff and summer interns would surprise random individuals around the city with a variety of prizes consistent with the day’s theme.

    The prizes ranged from tickets to outdoor theater performances, tennis court time, cycling gear, golf balls — even dog treats. The recipients would have their picture taken on the spot and that image would be posted to the department’s social media outlets (Facebook, Instagram and Twitter) and hashtagged with #ParkItForward and #KCParks. Posts were a clear visual representation of Park and Recreation Month and all that Kansas City Parks has to offer.

    The public quickly warmed to the campaign and began to like, comment and share the Park It Forward posts on social media. The new website, which had gone live in June, also received increased attention. By the end of July, Kansas Citians were regularly checking the Adventure of the Day, generating some of the highest site traffic and viewed posts on the agency’s social media pages to date.

    The Park It Forward campaign was highly successful for several reasons. First, it utilized social media platforms to a degree previously unprecedented for Kansas City Parks and Recreation. Facebook, Instagram and Twitter all saw significant increases in the amount of interactivity among followers both old and new. Second, it was effective in educating the public about the new website and the diversity of Kansas City’s parks and corresponding facilities. Finally, Park It Forward was a positive initiative for Kansas City, Missouri, Parks and Recreation because it reiterated the sentiment that parks and recreation is a resource designed to generate increased community among the city’s residents.

     

  3. KC Parks Offers Many a Place for Marrying

    It’s almost Springtime and that means love is in the air. It also means that wedding planning fairs are everywhere as brides-to-be explore ideas for their big day. Surprisingly, the City offers perhaps the largest collection of wedding venues in the metro area. From intimate ceremonies on a sun-dappled wooden bridge to a wild backdrop at the zoo, the list is long and varied. But don’t delay in booking a facility—some fill up quickly.

    A long-time favorite spot is the Loose Park Rose Garden, a romantic setting just south of the Country Club Plaza with a bubbling fountain and built-in fragrance. People used to camp out on the first business day in January to reserve a date in the popular months of June and September. This practice stopped after a new policy that allows bookings beginning in April for the next calendar year. A nearby pond fringed with picturesque bridges and towering trees is an alternate location for a small ceremony.

    RB WeddingA more elaborate bridge setting is Minor Park’s Old Red Bridge in south Kansas City where sweethearts are encouraged to “lock” their love by snapping a padlock (often signed with their initials) onto the railings. This historic bridge across the Blue River now serves as a pedestrian walkway and an occasional wedding aisle.

    A different type of historic setting is provided by the Shoal Creek Living History Museum in Clay County. This authentic 19th century village includes the Mt. Ararat Baptist Church, a one-room building with a vestibule and raised chancel. It seats 125 people, and true to the period, has no air conditioning, heat or electricity. Windows in the white clapboard structure let in light and natural ventilation.

    Other popular spots are Swope Memorial, which sits on a cliff and offers sweeping views of Swope Park and the Kansas City Zoo; Mill Creek near the J.C. Nichols Fountain adjacent to the Plaza; Southmoreland Park with its 100-year-old stone walls; the classic Colonnade in Kessler Park; and the Bruce R. Watkins Cultural Heritage Center (for receptions only) near the dramatic Spirit of Freedom Fountain.

    More information on KC Parks wedding venues. Watch a video about KCParks Wedding Venues.

  4. Kansas City B-cycle is Expanding

    The city’s two-season-old public bike system is gearing up for a major expansion in spring 2014. Kansas City B-cycle, Powered by Blue KC, will add at least eight new stations in the Plaza and Westport districts, and hopes to add more in surrounding neighborhoods, bringing the benefits of bike share to new areas of the city. B-cycle is turning to the public, as well as local businesses and institutions, to help it reach its goal as its 2014 season opens.

    “Kansas City B-cycle is ready to grow, and we want its expansion to be truly supported by Kansas Citians,” says Eric Rogers, executive director of BikeWalkKC, the local bicycle & pedestrian advocacy group that operates B-cycle.

    The bike share system–which currently consists of 12 self-service stations in River Market, Downtown, and Crossroads–will add at least eight new stations in the Plaza and Westport as its 2014 season opens in March. The stations will generally be sited along 47th St. and Westport Rd. B-cycle says density and existing bike-friendliness makes these districts a good fit for bike share. It is also pursuing a further six locations in Midtown, Brookside, Waldo, and the 18th and Vine district.

    B-cycle says expansion will bring the benefits of bike share with it. In its first two years of operation, the system proved an effective tool for increasing health and reducing environmental impact among its users — across 9,600 trips, users burned 1.1 million calories and saved 27,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions. Leaders in other cities with bike share system have touted the transportation alternative’s affordability to users and ability to attract new residents.

    “The pattern is clear — expanding into new neighborhoods will benefit residents, visitors, and the wider city alike,” says Rogers. “That’s why we’re excited to be moving into two of our best and busiest districts.”

    B-cycle also touts the low pricetag of its expansion. An individual bike share station with 11 bike docks costs $50,000. This pales in comparison to the cost of one mile of urban freeway which runs from $19.6 million to $78 million for a four lane mile.

    “Bike share is a huge and growing asset to each city where its found — with B-cycle, individuals can give directly to make the system all it can be to KC.”

    Kansas City B-cycle’s campaign ends March 1. More information on the B-cycle’s expansion can be found at bikesharekc.com

  5. Kansas City’s Parks System is on the Path to Historic Status

    Published January 31, 2014
    BY STEVE PAUL,The Kansas City Star

    It’s not unusual to hear a first-time visitor express surprise about Kansas City’s landscape. The hills, the trees, the greenery — who knew?

    Of course, we have known that for more than a century. As a city we have long touted the winding roads, the tree canopies and other distinguishing features of the parks and boulevards system, whose origins date to the late 19th century.

    And now we’re on the verge of taking our landscape identity up a notch. A nomination to the National Register of Historic Places, encompassing the concept and history of the parks and boulevards system, is making its way through the process. It’s a welcome move.

    The city’s Historic Preservation Commission endorsed the first step of a nomination at a recent hearing. The Missouri Historic Preservation Office will take it up on Feb. 7, and approval will forward the documentary material to the National Parks Service, which oversees the National Register.

    The nomination, an inch-thick history of the system, along with an inventory and supporting maps and charts, was prepared by Cydney Millstein of Architectural & Historical Research and Paul Novick of Bowman Bowman Novick. They updated and expanded on research done in two previous surveys of parks history, conducted more than 20 years ago. Their report lays the foundation for future nominations of specific features and elements of the parks and boulevard system.

    In her presentation to the commission, Millstein noted that Chicago and other cities have landed historic designations for their park systems. Kansas City’s system, she said, ranked among the forefront cities where the “romantic park movement” took root — places like Boston and Brooklyn, where parks and parkways helped soften and define the urban experience.

    Millstein’s report emphasizes the role of landscape architect George E. Kessler, who masterminded Kansas City’s parks plan in 1893. Kessler’s operating idea was to incorporate the city’s rolling terrain and natural features along bluffs and waterways in order to create green parklands all connected by wide and gracious boulevards. Kessler’s vision ranged from the clifftops at North Terrace Park (now Kessler Park) to Penn Valley Park and eventually to the far sprawling expanse of Swope Park. The parks were meant to build community and neighborhoods and to provide play space for adults and children.

    “The system, as it stands today,” Millstein writes, “is an outgrowth of Kessler’s 1893 system for Kansas City, a comprehensive network that guided and coordinated urban growth.”

    Kessler went on to help numerous American cities plan their own systems — from Fort Worth, Texas, to Fort Wayne, Ind.

    Bradley Wolf, the city’s historic preservation officer, elaborated on the Kansas City plan’s significance.

    “Once the boulevard system was established,” he told me this week, “it spurred growth on the adjacent properties. It also was early urban renewal in that it removed some areas that were considered slums at that time. Kansas City created a robust parks and boulevard system that grew rapidly and steadily, and that is a story not seen widely in the country.”

    One preservation commission member questioned whether a historic-register designation would lead to overly restrictive requirements for potential development along city boulevards.

    The short answer is no, though Denise Phillips, of the parks department, replied at the hearing that it would help guide “quality development” and protect tree cover and other pertinent features, which already are specially covered under city law regarding boulevard properties.

    Parks remain a vital element of our urban life, and though some have fared better than others over the years, we should not take them for granted. Historic-register status for the parks system gives the city another selling point in the ongoing search for distinctiveness.

    To reach Steve Paul, call 816-234-4762 or send email to paul@kcstar.com. Follow him on Twitter at sbpaul.

     

  6. Starlight Now Accepting Internship Applications

    The Bob Rohlf Internship Program gives college students the opportunity to get hands-on experience in running a theatre

    Starlight Theatre is now accepting summer internship applications for college students interested in theatre and non-theatre related careers. Interning at Starlight Theatre affords students the unique opportunity to work closely with professionals and contribute to the success of Starlight’s education programs, concert series and Broadway season.

    Through the Bob Rohlf Internship Program, 15 paid positions are available in multiple areas:  Accounting, Education, Development, Horticulture, Information Systems, Marketing (Concert  and Broadway musicals), Group Sales, Operations, Props and Scenic Art, Technical Theatre, Production Management and Stage Management. The length of the internships varies by position but ranges from five to 15 weeks.  All positions require some evening and weekend commitments.

    Applications and job descriptions are listed at www.kcstarlight.com.  The deadline for application is March 3.

    Starlight Theatre, the oldest and largest performing arts organization in Kansas City, presents and produces Broadway musicals and concerts, offers extensive community outreach and educational programming including classes, scholarships and Starlight’s Blue Star Awards, one of the largest high school musical theatre award programs in the country. It is operated in partnership with KC Parks.