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‘For Them, Not To Them’

As the ground breaks on the Woodall Rodgers Deck Park, Millennium Park vet offers critical words of advice.

By Peter Simek

Photo: wikicommons

As much as a groundbreaking shows the first physical signs of progress towards the realization of a dream, it also reflects the closing gap in time before a project realized is set in stone. Ground was broken on the Woodall Rodgers Deck Park yesterday, September 14, amidst the usual political pageantry of photo-ready smiles, handshakes, and lame jokes. The park, which only a year ago seemed to be sliding shy of its scheduled completion at the end of 2010, was given a jumpstart by federal stimulus funds. Deemed shovel ready, the shovels are now flying, and the dream of capping the highway that slices through downtown – a dream that stretches back to the very design of Woodall Rodgers Freeway – is becoming a reality.

The morning before the ceremony, The Real Estate Council hosted a membership breakfast featuring speaker Tony Jones, Chancellor of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, who was heavily involved in the planning and design of the Woodall Rodgers Deck Park’s figurative godfather: Chicago’s Millennium Park. Built over a busy railroad yard inconveniently plopped dead center in Chicago’s downtown, between the museums and green space of Grant Park and the hubbub of Michigan Ave. and the Miracle Mile, Chicago’s park was envisioned as a solution for an urban planning quandary, a way to lure residents back to downtown Chicago, and an architectural playground.

That park’s success has also boosted the boosters of the Woodall Rodgers Park. Millennium Park’s usage has exceeded everyone’s expectations. Numerous developments – including many residential – have sprung up around the park, and billions of dollars in economic activity can be attributed directly to Millennium Park.

But this isn’t what most excites Jones about Millennium’s success. For Jones, it is the ownership Chicago residents have taken of the park that is the measure of its merit – from Crown Fountain, where thousands of kids splash about in the water during the city’s few warm months, to the sporadic unplanned yoga and tai chi classes that spring up on the park’s great lawn. Jones said that Indian-born artist Anish Kapoor was less than enthused when he heard his memorable polished steal sculpture Cloud Gate had been lovingly dubbed “Da Bean” by Chicagoans. But Jones explained to the artist that nickname was an honor – locals had embraced his work and made it their own. Everyone who visits the city needs a picture with “Da Bean,” and musicians have discovered that the bottom side of the sculpture, while boasting an incredible illusion of reflected infinity, the sensation of the world rising to the heavens, also has fantastic acoustics. Buskers abound.

All this has happened, Jones said, because of the orientation of the park’s fundamental vision. Despite hope for its economic and aesthetic impact, the park was envisioned as a gift for the city’s residents. And with that admission, Jones offered advice to the real estate professionals, politicians, and park planners gathered to hear him speak in Dallas: “Build it for them, not to them.”

woodall-park-picture

A rendering of the Woodall Rodgers Deck Park

Dallasites hardly need an explanation of the distinction. The day after the Woodall Deck Park groundbreaking saw the ground break on the controversial convention center hotel, a project that (whether it turns out a financial success or not) was thrust upon the residents of Dallas with such suddenness that it provoked a knee-jerk referendum in a effort to squash the project. In recent years, the Trinity River Project, which once promised a pastoral vision of a grand green space for Dallas, has largely lost public confidence do to delays, huge projected cost overruns, an expanding vision for a tollway in the park, and fears that the signature Calatrava sculptural bridge is a really a high-dollar bridge to nowhere.

This fall will see the opening of the Dallas Arts District and DART’s Green Line, two decades-old projects, and yet some still talk about Dallas’ dream projects as being the product of self-interested (read: moneyed, or Park Cities) individuals, willing to bankrupt the city for the benefit of the upper classes. This suspicion is branded on our character, fueled by decades of social inequality, powerful meddling, and political corruption. “This is Dallas,” goes a line of argument, “things don’t get built for us – they get built on us.”

This is why the history of the Woodall Rodgers Deck Park offers some hope that the project can uproot some of these perceptions. Largely overshadowed by the years of squabbling over the Trinity River Project, the deck park’s recent progress has come quickly thanks to the federal stimulus program. Though much smaller in scale, plans for the Woodall Park offer similar amenities to Chicago’s gem. There will an outdoor amphitheater with a great lawn, a “water feature,” and a children’s garden. It will abut the Arts District, itself shaping into a large public park space. But what will it take for Dallasites to buy into the park – to begin to dig in and use it, take ownership of the space so that it becomes fertile ground for casual, impromptu displays of lively leisure?

Tony Jones said park planners did not predict much of the activity that has made Millennium Park such an enjoyable setting for life and leisure, but his comment is a little misleading. They did not know that thousands of children from all over Chicago (and the world) would flock to Crown Fountain to play, but they did make sure the design of the fountain was shallow enough so that children could play in it. They did not expect so many business people from surrounding offices would rent ice skates on their lunch breaks during the winter and skate in the park, but they did build an outdoor ice rink with a skate rental facility. In other words, what Millennium Park provided in its design were a number of low-cost or absolutely free things to do that appealed to a broad spectrum of individuals.

The Woodall Rodgers Deck Park plans to offer some similar attractions, but with funding for the park’s amenities not yet set in stone, there is still opportunity to return to the park’s plan with a set of simple questions inspired by the spirit of Millennium Park: Where will the children play? Where will the adults play? Where will the teenagers play? If the only answers are: eat a sandwich on a bench, play on a playground, walk a dog , or watch a performance in the amphitheater, then the vision for the park is not quite there yet. Don’t worry, there’s still some time left to dream.

8 Comments »

  1. Thank you for the splendid thoughts. Another question will be how do we get there. With the closing of Harwood street, there will be an opportunity to have some pedestrian friendly walks into the park area. It is not much fun to walk around the neighborhood of uptown around the Ritz or The Crescent. Let us have some pedestrian amenities to lure us in. Harwood might even be used to bike in from the Katy Trail and through downtown to the Farmers Market.

  2. Peter: And I hope those in decision-making roles WILL in fact dream. And dream big. Please, not Victory Park Gucci-big and not DART Deep Ellum Gateway Million-Dollar Gumby big. But big as in thoughtful, humane, Big-City Vision big. We don’t necessarily have to have the wonder of Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate or Frank Gehry’s Jay Pritzker Pavilion and BP Bridge. Just some deep thought that won’t end up making us once more look like a bunch of dorks. Oops, did I say that?

  3. “The Woodall Rodgers Deck Park plans to offer some similar attractions, but with funding for the park’s amenities not yet set in stone, there is still opportunity to return to the park’s plan with a set of simple questions inspired by the spirit of Millennium Park: Where will the children play? Where will the adults play? Where will the teenagers play? .. Don’t worry, there’s still some time left to dream.”

    My somewhat different comparison to Millennium Park can be found here: http://www.kera.org/blogs/culture/2009/02/03/woodall-rodgers-park-a-different-perspective/

    What’s not often noted: Millennium Park is almost five times the size of the Woodall. Yet “in public discussions about the future of the Arts District, Woodall Rodgers Park is often held up as a cure-all for what ails the district: the lack of pedestrian-friendly design, the lack of shade, the lack of appealing outdoor activities, the lack of retail shopping and dining. So we’re cramming into that narrow little stretch a lot of expectations that the park may never be able to fulfill.”

  4. looking over the plans, there are plenty of opportunities to play for both children and adults. the great lawn hopefully will have kite flyers, football toss etc. the dog park with jumping water should be facinating to watch. the water sculpture on east end with cascading water and entry would be really fun if i were still a kid. the childrens park with story telling tree, equipment and a dragon fountain looks like somewhere i would take my kids. the plans also show a reading and games area next to the restaurant. the park also will make the DMA, Nasher, Crow Musuem, ATT Center Myerson all more attractive to come and visit. when the katy trail gets extended to the arts district, i look forward to biking with my 3 girls to spend time at park!! I am excited for Dallas!!

  5. @Jerome: You’re right, it is no cure all. But the section of Millennium Park that includes Cloud Gate, the ice rink/restaurant, and the Crown Fountain comes in at around five acres.

  6. On my last visit to Chicago, I think spending the day in Millennium Park was the most memorable event. There were so many people enjoying it, yet it was not crowded. We just sat. Didn’t do a thing.

    I hope we will be able to have that same enjoyment here in Dallas. Besides being a cure all, I get the feeling there is an expectation the park will be a turning point for the city. That’s a lot to live up to…

  7. On my way into work every day, I go past the new Main Street Garden Park. It has yet to be completed, but its little hills and sidewalks are definitely in utero. While touting such catch-all phrases as Eat, Shop, Play, the park is surrounded by buildings which do not offer those things themselves. The Universites Center of Dallas, the abandoned Dallas Grand Hotel, as well as the Hotel Indigo and some office buildings, are there, but none of these are really sights in themselves. There are no cafes, bars, clubs, or bookstores to already draw foot traffic in.

    While the view from the park gives an amazing panaroma of the Dallas skyline, it it sufficiently distant from the main hub of downtown to get people wandering that far up. Its location near the EBD Transfer Center and the underpass of 75 also leaves it in a peripheral location.

    Perhaps the Deck Park might end up uniting the city over a chasm. On a smaller level, Main Street Garden is trying to patch up an ugly, wounded area of downtown. I hope all the students coming in and out will bring life to the area. But will businesses and eateries follow suit by leasing property alongside the park? How will the Garden grow?

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