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Posts Tagged ‘year in review’

Whether it’s in the six miles of restored trails or the shining solitude of the Mellon Park Walled Garden at dusk, you’ve probably noticed some of the impact the Parks Conservancy has made in the parks this year.  Through your support, we’ve been able to complete two capital projects and a host of other work, including laying a lot of foundations for the coming years.  Before we enter our 15th anniversary year in 2011, here’s a look back at some of the notable accomplishments of 2010.

The Mellon Park Walled Garden Opens
This June, hundreds of people blanketed the lawn at Mellon Park to honor the memory of Ann Katharine Seamans at the garden’s rededication ceremony.  Since then, the garden has been filled with couples getting married, friends having picnics, families enjoying Bach Beethoven & Brunch, and more photo shoots than we can count.  The community has embraced this space anew and we couldn’t be happier with how everyone is taking care of it.  And now that winter is approaching, it should be fun to watch the stars shine through a thin blanket of snow. 

Mellon Park Walled Garden

Image courtesy of Alexander Denmarsh

$3.8 Million in Trail Improvements
There’s a spot in Highland Park that overlooks the Allegheny River and the Highland Park Bridge, and legend has it that this spot was used as a lookout during the French and Indian War (well before there was such a bridge, of course!).  For the past few years, if you wanted to get to this area you had to sneak through a fence and wade through a construction storage area.  Now, thanks to the trail and signage project that’s just been completed, you can access this spot from a new trail that goes all the way to the seasonal pools that were installed in 2006.  This new connection in Highland Park is just one of the benefits of a project that has made an impact in all four regional parks, including Schenley Park’s Panther Hollow (below).

Panther Hollow Trail

Schenley Plaza Welcomes Its Millionth Visitor
It’s hard to believe that Schenley Plaza has been around long enough to host a million people, but that’s the mark we celebrated this July when Carol Ambrosia became the park’s millionth visitor.  We’ve got some big events scheduled for 2011 that we’ll tell you more about in the spring, but here’s hoping we get to two million even faster than we got to one!

Carol Ambrosia and Jim Griffin

Carol Ambrosia with Jim Griffin, Schenley Plaza Manager

Panther Hollow Gets a Million Bucks…and a Plan
Since 2003, the Parks Conservancy has been working to remove invasive plants and replace them with natives in the Panther Hollow Valley of Schenley Park.  This ongoing project, which has also included the restoration of the Phipps Run Stream and the installation of a rain garden at the Schenley Park Cafe, is all part of a larger initiative to clean up the Panther Hollow Watershed and restore Panther Hollow Lake.  That project gained a lot of momentum this summer when the Richard King Mellon Foundation gave the Parks Conservancy $1 million, in part to develop a watershed management plan.  We’re in the process of choosing a firm to work with, with a goal of developing healthier stream flows and recapturing and infiltrating some of the water that’s currently going into the sewer system.  You can follow the project on this page.

As part of the planning process, this year we began holding public programs to educate watershed residents on how their actions at home contribute to the health of the park and the watershed as a whole.  From Michele Adams’ presentation on stormwater management to our workshop on building rain gardens, we’re forging connections between the park and its neighbors.  Look for more programs like this in 2011.

Panther Hollow Lake

Volunteers Create an Extravaganza
This past spring we teamed up with several other local organizations to host what was possibly the biggest volunteer event in our history, the Panther Hollow Extravaganza.  Nearly 200 people braved the rain to do everything from planting trees to removing discarded parking meters!  We’re planning to have a similar event to celebrate Earth Day in 2011, so keep an eye out here for a date announcement.

Panther Hollow Extravaganza

Image courtesy of John Altdorfer

We Tip Our Caps to Maz and Our Hats to Highland Park
Our two big special events this year covered the gamut from one-time-only to a beloved tradition.  In October, we co-hosted with the Pittsburgh Pirates a celebration of the Pirates’ 1960 World Series win, starting with an unveiling of a sidewalk plaque at Schenley Plaza dedicated to Bill Mazeroski.  Following the radio broadcast of the game, the 1960 team alumni headed over to PNC Park, where an evening gala was held in their honor.  We were thrilled to be part of the sharing of such sweet memories, and we’re happy to be neighbors with that famous Forbes Field wall.

Bill Mazeroski

Image courtesy of Mary Jane Bent

This year’s Spring Hat Luncheon was our twelfth annual opportunity to mingle high fashion with the great outdoors, but it’s the first one in recent memory to feature a very special guest: sunshine!  Not only was our visit to Highland Park bright and full of flowers (on hats and in the garden), it also attracted a huge crowd, with the tents practically bursting at the seams to hold almost 700 guests.  We’ll be back in Riverview Park for 2011, and tickets will be available online soon!

Spring Hat Luncheon

Image courtesy of Mary Jane Bent

Hill District Completes Greenprint Plan
The plan to reframe the vision of Pittsburgh’s Hill District as “A Village in the Woods” is in place.  The Hill District Greenprint was developed by Hood Design, the Find the Rivers! consortium (including the Parks Conservancy), and the community to address land use in a way that promotes economic and health benefits for the neighborhood.  The plan’s unveiling this June has left teasers throughout the neighborhood of what’s to come, including sidewalk stencils signaling local businesses, ribbons indicating future trails, and cleanup projects that improve connections and access.  Bringing the Greenprint’s vision to life will be a multi-year process, which you can follow on this page.

Hill District Greenprint

Image courtesy of Hood Design

Cliffside and McKinley Parks Receive State Funding
Part of the Greenprint’s agenda includes the renovation of Cliffside Park, a playground on Cliff Street with potentially spectacular views of the Pittsburgh skyline and the Allegheny River.  The park is in a great location and could be developed into a community gathering space as well as a place for children to develop a connection to nature.  Along with this project, an effort to restore one of the entrances to Beltzhoover’s McKinley Park received $500,000 in state funding this year, which the Parks Conservancy will match.  We’re holding meetings with McKinley Park’s supporters now to determine the best project for that park, and we’ve been working with Cliffside Park’s neighbors this year too.  These community parks will receive some well-deserved attention in the year to come.

McKinley Park

Gardens Get a New Focus
If you’ve walked by any of our garden projects this year, you might have noticed they’re all looking especially well-cared-for.  That’s because we now have a full-time gardener, Angela Masters, attending to the flowerbeds.  From the mums that brightened Schenley Plaza this fall to the daisies in the Mellon Park Walled Garden, Angela has been keeping everything blooming beautifully.  She’s also become a great ambassador for the Parks Conservancy, because she has a chance to speak to so many people passing by every day.  Next time you see her with her gloves and pruners, make sure you stop and say hello!

Angela Masters

High School Urban EcoStewards Plant Seeds for the Future
The first semester of our High School Urban EcoStewards program, with students from City High School, was a huge success, with students contributing to the Panther Hollow project as they learned about ecological restoration.  And thanks to a grant from the Grable Foundation, the program is continuing this season with students from The Ellis School and the Science and Technology Academy.  We’ll return to City High this spring to continue developing the next generation of park stewards.

City High UES

Image courtesy of John Altdorfer

Park Lovers Help Plan for the Future
None of the things we do at the Parks Conservancy happen without a plan, and no document is more important to us than the Regional Parks Master Plan, which we published jointly with the City of Pittsburgh in 2000.  Ten years into our blueprint for parks restoration, it’s time for a refresher, to cross completed projects off the list, add new ones like the Frick Environmental Center, and refocus on what’s still left to accomplish.  This fall we held four community meetings that addressed the big issues in each park, and we’re incorporating public input into our plan update.  In the meantime, you can offer us your comments and suggestions about the parks on our feedback forum.

Master Plan Update Meeting

Image courtesy of John Altdorfer

The Focus Turns to Trees
The last several years have brought increasingly bad news for the trees in our parks: an increasing deer population, the arrival of the invasive emerald ash borer beetle, and now an outbreak of oak wilt disease.  Is any tree safe?  And is there something we can do to improve their chances of survival?  We believe that there is, and we want to learn from the best, so we’ve been consulting tree experts from around the country to develop a tree action plan.  We’ll be hosting a public symposium in February to share what we’ve learned with you.  For now, read up on the threats to our urban forest and how you can help prevent the spread of pests and diseases in your own back yard.

Horse chestnut

Thanks to all our supporters for another unbelievable year of progress in the parks.  We hope you’ll all join us in celebrating our 15th anniversary in 2011, when we’ll look back at all that’s been accomplished since 1996 and announce exciting plans for the future.  If you’d like to make a year-end gift to the Parks Conservancy, please click here.

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2010 is almost here, and the staff at the Parks Conservancy is busily putting together plans for the year’s projects, programs, and outreach activities.  We’re expecting a banner year, with lots of exciting work that will continue to elevate our parks toward world standards of excellence.  But we thought before we look into the future, we should take a moment to celebrate all that we’ve accomplished in 2009.

Volunteers Plant Over 500 Trees

This year, 657 volunteers (including those in our dedicated Urban EcoStewards program) contributed more than 2,900 hours to parks restoration.  That includes planting 555 trees in the parks, everywhere from Flagstaff Hill in Schenley Park to the seasonal pools in Highland Park.  We’ll continue to count on volunteers next year, and we need people to help with everything from litter pickup to planting bulbs.  If you’d like to join our volunteer corps, click here.

Volunteers plant a bald cypress tree in Highland Park.

Parks and Conservancy Win 9 Awards

Our park system is gaining recognition in our own region and around the world. Among the awards we received this year were the Riverview Chapel Shelter’s Historic Preservation Award from the City’s Historic Review Commission and Schenley Plaza’s Silver Award for Environmentally Sustainable Projects from the International Awards for Livable Communities held in Pilsen, Czech Republic.  Take a look at the complete list here.

Parks Conservancy CEO Meg Cheever accepts the Silver LivCom Award in Pilsen.

Special Events Raise Funds

In its eleventh year, the Spring Hat Luncheon dazzled guests with beautiful views of the Pittsburgh skyline from the Schenley Overlook.  The Children’s Carousel Tea transformed Schenley Plaza into a true big top thanks to the Zany Umbrella Circus, and the first-ever Target the Parks was a great success in Ligonier.  (Click the links above to see photo slideshows from each event!)

The 2009 Spring Hat Luncheon at the Schenley Park Overlook

Lecture Series Explores Park Issues

This spring, four of the Parks Conservancy’s staff members gave lunchtime lectures at the Schenley Park Café and Visitor Center on topics ranging from tree care to watershed health.  Then in the fall, we hosted landscape architect Walter Hood, who shared his plans for greening the Hill District.  Another lecture brought Doug Blonsky, Administrator of Central Park, and Tim Fulton, former Director of Operations at the Buffalo Olmsted Parks Conservancy, to town to share how zone management has worked in their parks.  You can see archived materials from that lecture here.

Walter Hood (third from left) poses with the Greenprint project team.

Pirates Hit Home Runs for Trees

If you attended a Pittsburgh Pirates game at PNC Park this season, you may have seen our logo up on the scoreboard from time to time.  That’s because, thanks to a new partnership, every time the Pirates hit a home run at PNC Park, the Pirates donated a native tree for planting in the parks.  This year’s total was 75 trees!  Now we all have one more good reason to root, root, root for the home team.

Pirates President Frank Coonelly (second from left) and the Pirate Parrot joined a DPW and Parks Conservancy crew to plant a hop hornbeam in Riverview Park.

Schenley Plaza Breaks Attendance Records

In Schenley Plaza‘s fourth summer, an average of 1,000 people a day visited the park!  Even more people came out for special events like the WYEP Summer Music Festival, Pogopalooza, the Visionary Arts Festival, and the Pittsburgh Jazz Festival.  We’re planning another season of great programming now, and we expect our one millionth Plaza guest sometime in summer 2010. 

Pogopalooza was a high-flying spectacle that attracted an appreciative crowd.

Hill District Greenprint Takes Shape

The Parks Conservancy has been working with Find the Rivers! to create a plan for green space in the Hill District.  This year, Walter Hood was chosen as the principal landscape architect on the project, which will help to create a network of public green spaces and river overlooks.  The plan is continuing to take shape with input from the community.  Watch this space for updates in 2010.

Volunteers help green the Hill District during Pitt's Make a Difference Day.

Parks Are Free Campaign Encourages People to Get Outdoors

The Parks Conservancy was everywhere this summer thanks to an ad campaign sponsored by UPMC Health Plan that helped to promote the dozens of free events held in the park each week.  The Parks Are Free website provided an at-a-glance look at the day’s events, with a link to a calendar searchable by park, date, and event type.  Parks Are Free will continue to bring you a one-stop source for park events in 2010 and beyond.

This image appeared on billboards throughout the region.

Mellon Square Steps into the Spotlight

This historic downtown park will be a major focus for the Parks Conservancy going forward, as we plan for its restoration and future programming.  This year, we developed a web timeline, a cell phone walking tour, and a video celebrating the park’s historical significance.  Last month, The Cultural Landscape Foundation brought its Pioneers Regional Symposium to Pittsburgh to honor the life and work of Mellon Square’s designer, John O. Simonds.  The momentum from 2009 will continue into 2010, as the park’s new management plan is unveiled and work begins.

Mellon Square on a lovely fall day.

Stars Are Born at Mellon Park Walled Garden

It may not have looked like it this summer when the lawn was under construction, but in 2010 the Mellon Park Walled Garden will be the most beautiful place for stargazing in the city–even if you’re looking at the ground.  Work has concluded for this year, and after a winter for the plants and grass to establish themselves, we’ll have a grand re-opening for this beautiful Shadyside park in the spring.

The grass continues to grow in at Mellon Park.

Park Trails Get a Makeover

After several years of fundraising, engineering, and approvals, our trail and signage project began last week in Schenley Park.  While you’re snuggled inside by the fire this winter, crews will be improving the condition of trails throughout the park system.  The project will improve connectivity in the parks and make it safer for hikers, runners, and cyclists to use the trails.

Trails in Schenley Park are currently under construction.

And that’s only some of what we accomplished!  We also launched a spiffy new website, hired a Director of Education who has already started putting together some awesome programs for students, expanded the Daffodil Project to Highland Park, put up interpretive signage inside the Riverview Chapel Shelter, led 16 more Walks in the Woods, restored the bronze work on the Westinghouse Memorial, welcomed a new Director of Marketing and Membership Development, hosted over 100 (!) people at a time for free yoga at Schenley Plaza, cleaned up after a whale of a June storm, installed giant LED daffodils at the Plaza, and much more.

Thank you to all of our supporters who helped make every bit of this possible.  We will do our best to top this in 2010 with your continued support!

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