Private Funding Sought to Save Prospect Terrace Park in Providence

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Private Funding Sought to Save Prospect Terrace Park in Providence

A neighborhood organization is looking to raise over $100,000 in private funds to make Prospect Terrace Park ADA compliant, among other improvements. Photo: CC/Infrogmation
The College Hill Neighborhood Association (CHNA) is looking to raise over $100,000 to help make Prospect Terrace Park in Providence compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act, along with other improvements -- in a campaign that they are calling "Save Prospect Terrace Park."

Prospect Terrace Park, which was founded in 1867 and features the iconic 15 foot statue of Roger Williams overlooking the city, is one of over 100 parks owned and maintained by the City of Providence.

The CHNA announced that it launched the crowdfunding effort "Save Prospect Terrace Park" in conjunction with the Providence Parks Department.

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"We do not set specific budgets for each of the 114 parks for maintenance but using acreage, frequency of trash pick-up, leaf removal, mowing and additional maintenance it would be approximately $6,000 with an additional $1,000 for forestry costs," said Acting Director of Communications Emily Crowell in Mayor Jorge Elorza's office, of Prospect Park's annual funding from the city. "This year the park saw $3,000 additional in barrels. This does not account for grants, volunteer and community partnership contributions."

"The total approved Parks budget for FY17 is $12,858,126, accounting for neighborhood park services, forestry services, botanical center services, Roger Williams Park services, North burial ground services and personnel," added Crowell. 

Scope of Work

The campaign seeks donations for the 501(c)(3) non-profit Friends of Prospect Terrace Park fund established "to restore and enhance the park by replacing walkways to bring the park into compliance with ADA standards, replacing worn benches, repairing the retaining wall and fences, opening views, improving the landscaping and adding interpretive signs explaining the fascinating history of the park."

According to the CHNA, the group is "working closely with the Providence Parks Department and will have its funding managed through the Partnership for Providence Park...in-kind construction services will be provided by the Parks Department Forestry Division. CHNA has completed preliminary landscape architectural drawings of the proposed work and plans to work with the Parks Department to develop the designs and prepare documents for bid and implementation once funds have been raised."

$100K+ Needed

“We would like to make walks in the park ADA compliant with curb cuts and reductions in the path grades. However even if we just wanted to repair the broken path and steps, we cannot without first making them ADA compliant to the maximum extent possible, making it a larger and more expensive project,” said Sara Bradford of Bradford Associates LLC, a landscape architectural firm who has donated preliminary renovation plans for the park. “In addition, the retaining wall needs repointing and removal of damaging vegetation and animals, and the wrought iron fence pickets are rotted out and need to be replaced, but this work is not currently in the city budget.”

Repair retaining wall and fence $32,000
Repair walks and make accessible $43,000
Replace aging benches $9,500
Repair aging steps $10,000
Repair Condon Street walk and curb $20,000
Create new interpretive signs $4,500

See the fundraising page HERE

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