![]() ![]() The hope after that is to start construction in 2024. The John Day/Canyon City Parks and Recreation District is putting a question on the May 17 ballot asking if voters in the District support spending 4 million. Once the master plans are in place, the parks department will go back into neighborhoods to seek feedback on the actual design.The next steps are to hire design teams to create master plans for each park – which will likely happen early next year. Tuesday's public meetings were the last touchpoint with the community for awhile, Patton said. The pool would still be a wading pool, but a new gradual entry pool where the water starts at zero inches and gradually increases in depth. ![]() The plan would be to add more shade, better changing areas and a refrigerated ice rink with a pond/hockey rink in the center. Either indoor or outdoor improvements would also come with more parking, improved walking trail and reconstructed baseball/softball fields. That'd include an indoor playground, gym, track, multi-purpose rooms and potentially a library storefront.Īn outdoor pool option for Kuehn Park would bring a new outdoor aquatic center and the removal of the existing pool. The indoor plan would add a 60,000-square-foot recreation center much like the one proposed at Frank Olson Park. The outdoor site plan also includes the additional baseball/softball fields, but instead with a new entirely outdoor aquatic center. The indoor site plan includes a 60,000-square-foot indoor recreation center and the addition of a seven-field baseball/softball complex north of 18th Street. Here's a look at how renovated pools may end up: Terrace Park Laurel OaksĪnd here's a look at indoor/outdoor options for pools up for replacement: Frank Olson The design shared Tuesday is intended to be a "menu of experiences," that each neighborhood will be able to pick and choose from in the formal design process, Patton said. Which pools are getting replaced or renovated? "We probably can't start indoor rec centers across the city, but we want to think grand vision and implement as best we can moving forward," said Mike Patton, a park development specialist with the city. Designs for both Frank Olson and Kuehn Park pools included both an indoor and outdoor option, and an indoor pool would also likely mean more indoor recreation like a running track, gymnasium space and multi-purpose rooms.Now, the department has combined feedback from both public meetings and more than 1200 online surveys and comments into a potential design for what future pools could look like.The city parks department has been working over the last several months to get community feedback on five pools that are up for replacement or renovation in the next four to five years.Here's a (very early) glimpse at what those new facilities could look like. Simplified: Sioux Falls will have three brand new pools and a couple more upgraded ones in the coming years. Editor's note: An earlier version of the story misstated the number of survey responses.
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