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Capital Projects and Park Planning
The Capital Projects and Park Planning Division is comprised of a Division Chief, two Park Planners, a Geographic Information Specialist, and an Administrative Support Technician II. This Division is responsible for comprehensive long range planning, and the administration of the Department’s Capital Improvement Program to include land acquisition, park master plans, park design and construction. Among other things, this Division is responsible for development of the Comprehensive Recreation, Parks and Open Space Plan; the preservation and restoration of historic structures on County parkland; representation on the Subdivision Review Committee to evaluate and reconfigure open space dedications for the benefit of County citizens. Improvements to the Middle Patuxent Environmental Area (Capital Project N-3965) Improvements to the Middle Patuxent Environmental Area (Capital Project N-3965) The comment period on the Improvements to the Middle Patuxent Environmental Area (Capital Project N-3965) has ended; thank you to all those who responded. On June 18, 2008 at 7:30 p.m., the Park Advisory Board held a work session. The plans include parking, new restroom facilities, and a storage structure for park equipment. Click here to view the presentation. (This is a rather large PDF file and may take a few minutes to download)
Meadowbrook Indoor Sports Facility
The Department has installed six synthetic turf fields; two at Cedar Lane Park, two at Rockburn Branch Park, and two at Western Regional Park. The benefits of synthetic turf as compared to natural turf are: continuous play even during inclement weather, reduced injury, no chemical applications, reduced water usage, less maintenance and a consistently uniform playing surface. It costs approximately $22,000 annually to maintain a typical multipurpose field. This includes hauling equipment to the site, weekly mowing and painting lines, fertilizing, aerating, and over -seeding. On heavily used fields irrigation is also essential. All of these tasks require motorized equipment. With the exception of annually painting game lines that are not permanently sewn in, none of this is required on an artificial field. Artificial fields are considered by Maryland Department of Environment to be permeable surfaces, essentially a filtering system for rainfall. A worn and compacted natural field frequently erodes and sheds water like a parking lot. Artificial fields always have safe and consistent playing conditions no matter how many games are played. If more than 5 adult games per week are played on natural turf, grass cannot be sustained resulting in compacted soil, erosion, exposed aggregate material and unsafe playing conditions. Since more games can be played on artificial turf fields, fewer fields are needed overall, which allows more land to remain naturalized. According to the manufacturer, Over 40,000 tires are recycled per field and the entire field can be recycled again when time comes for replacement.
Western Regional Park Phase IV
Western Regional Park Master Plan (This rather large Adobe Acrobat file may take a few moments to open.) | |||||||
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