Trinity Trust Park Ideas Deeply Insult Dallas

Categories: Schutze

pavillion.jpg
dallascityhall.org
Might make a good graphic for a billboard that says, "Remember, only you can prevent shrimp boat accidents."

A little over two years ago The Battery Conservancy, a nonprofit support group for Battery Park at the confluence of the Hudson and East rivers on the southern tip of Manhattan, decided that it needed a new chair. The conservancy wanted a new park chair that would be light enough to tote around, heavy enough not to blow away in heavy weather and beautifully wonderfully distinctively designed.

So The Battery Conservancy announced an international competition for best Battery chair design. From 15 nations 679 designers submitted sketches, which a panel of judges whittled to 50 finalists, then five, then one. The winner, Andrew Jones of Toronto, drew a chair described by The New York Times as, "a pale blue flower, its curving petals forming the outlines of the seat, back and arms. Its smooth surface is perforated with tiny, seemingly random holes that will allow the seat to dry quickly after it rains."

A chair.

Here in Dallas decades of botched flood control, official neglect and simple happenstance have endowed us with an opportunity to create the largest urban park in the nation, vast enough to include huge recreational areas, a sprawling natural forest and a serious river. In short, this could be a park that truly redefines the destiny of a city, transforming Dallas from a jerry-built outback outpost to an American 21st century Mecca, a place where urban life and nature itself meld seamlessly at the city's heart.

So if New York needed a competition with 679 entries from 15 countries to get the right chair, do we think maybe Dallas should search the world, too, to get the best thinking and vision for an entire sprawling and complicated urban park unlike any other in the world? Apparently not.

See also:Trinity Trust's Plan for River Amenities Is a Vivid, Impossible Fever Dream

Instead, the vision of the park that city staffers showed the City Council Monday was a tawdry gimcrack nightmare, cheap tricks from the midway, cheesy anachronistic graphics that looked less like a park than a set for an Austin Powers movie.

Half the stuff shown to a council committee would be illegal in a floodway -- a massive concrete pavilion beneath of jumble of masts and netting, for example. When I first saw it I thought, "This is what happens when shrimp boat captains drink and drive." It's the kind of mess the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers spends millions of dollars cleaning out of floodways, not something you'd go out there and build on purpose.

In fact, the presentation to the council, under the cynical imprimatur of the Trinity Trust, was exactly the kind of vulgar bread and circuses we've seen all along from the people whose real aim is to build a super highway practically on top of the river, effectively cutting the throat of a park. The Trinity Trust, in my humble opinion, is a front group for those people.

In 1998 my former colleague, Laura Miller, was elected to the City Council. She had a serious interest in the Trinity River project and went to city staff to ask if she could see the engineering and design for the lakes and reverse-flow stretches of river and so on that were part of what were sold to voters in the 1998 Trinity River bond election.

She told me that city staffers told her all of that work had been handled by a consultant, Rob Allyn. Well, as luck would have it, Allyn was Miller's political consultant, so, easy to reach. But, of course, he was a political consultant, an ad agency owner, really, not a park designer and certainly not an engineer.

But she asked him what was the basis for the graphics shown to voters in the 1998 bond election depicting large lakes, sailboats, and reverse-flow river segments. What studies were done to show that such things were feasible?

She told me Allyn laughed. He told her the people running the bond campaign just asked him for some sailboat graphics and stuff like that, so he whipped some together for them. There was no study. There definitely was no international design competition.

The original vision for the Trinity River project, as far as the park was concerned, was a last-minute, slap-dash, schlock-ola toss-off from an ad agency cranking it out for an hourly fee. Sadly, as far as the bond election was concerned, Allyn's graphics were a success.

That was 16 years ago. Times have changed, thank God. This is not the same city it was then. The road whores, sensing that their beloved Trinity Toll Road project is in mortal threat of being cast aside and never built, are trying a 1998 trick on a 2014 city.

Give them zip lines. Give them a rock climbing course underneath a freeway. Give them a pavilion that looks like a three-way shrimp boat accident. Get them off our backs. Then build us that damned road.

The scary thing? Last time they pulled this, it worked.


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39 comments
noblefurrtexas
noblefurrtexas topcommenter

The Trinity Trust: 


o  You can trust that it will flood frequently

o  You can trust that West Nile Virus breeds there along with serious nuisance mosquitoes

o  You can trust that anything built there will look like a slum in five years or less

o  You can trust anyone using any kind of park there will face poisonous water snakes, rats, and more mosquitoes

o  You can trust the Trinity Trust members to never use the park itself, mostly because of danger and unforgivable heat

WhiteWhale
WhiteWhale

Is life really worth living if there are not going to be any solar powered water taxis?

Montemalone
Montemalone topcommenter

Suppose they build these umbrellas and rock walls.

Where are we supposed to dump our unwanted tires, autos, and bodies?

greenvillite
greenvillite

This is exactly why the next election cycle is so critical. If a candidate supports the Trinity Toll road (or won't say he doesn't), then you can expect from that candidate the same sort of "leadership" we've endured from council members like Voncil and Sheffie - cronyism at best and corruption at worst.

Be vigilant. The Tollway supporters are desperate. Just this week at the city council briefing on these horribly deceptive and often illegal plans, city staff and Voncil prevented council members from speaking in opposition or evening asking questions about these plans. How's that for democracy?

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

We best stop thinking like Californians.  Pretty, shiny things that are not functional.  That 25-mile long flood plain is a resource, not a park.  Or a highway to someplace else.


That NIMBY CA crowd refused to build dams and devote acreage to their needed water supply.  But they grew anyway.  They bought up the water rights from their ring states and it's now backfiring.  They are being cut off.

And Oklahoma already won their court battle with us.

In New Mexico, people kill each other over water.

Perry signed a $2 Billion water funding act, so let's tap it.  I realize it's not very glam but you might want to investigate why the Dallas Water Utilities and the TRWD (Tarrant Regional Water District) have begun work on the Integrated Pipeline - the largest public works project since the DFW Airport.  And it's not near enough.

We'd just have to stop draining pesticides into the Trinity like we do White Rock.

But we could have houseboat subdivisions off downtown ala Seattle.

I always wanted to live on the water.

And think of the drag races.

We'd look like San Francisco but with potable water.

One big snake lake from Lewisville to Kaufman.

MattL11
MattL11

"The original vision for the Trinity River project, as far as the park was concerned, was a last-minute, slap-dash, schlock-ola toss-off from an ad agency cranking it out for an hourly fee."


I would hope that the plans for the road were a little more carefully thought out, but judging from the sheer stupidity of that whole idea, I seriously doubt it. 

Catbird
Catbird

Maybe it's time the "Trinity Trust" had a competition for a new "chair" as well ;-)

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

Dam it.  Fill it.  Drink from it.  We're gonna need the water.

I'm serious.  

One of the best things our politicians ever did was to produce the pull necessary in D.C. to transform North Texas as a habitat for the future us.  And the future has arrived.

We wouldn't be here yakking had they not had the vision to do it.  And we won't grow to projections if we don't follow through on water.

"As late as 1913, Texas had only four major reservoirs with a total storage capacity of 288,340 acre-feet. By January 2012, Texas had 188 major reservoirs (those with a normal capacity of 5,000 acre-feet or larger), not counting four that are normally dry and six reservoirs made up of proximate impoundments. According to the U.S. Statistical Abstract of 2010, Texas has 5,607 square miles of inland water, ranking it first in the 48 contiguous states, followed by Florida, with 5,373 sq. mi.; Minnesota, 4,782; and Louisiana, 4,433."

The 1950s drought was the motivator.

ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul
ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul topcommenter

If the City truly wanted some type of Riverwalk or something similar, the old channel of the Trinity River would be a good place to start.


Just look at the park in front of the Mobil building on Stemmons.

floradora
floradora

I believe that a park should have as its basis nature. Trees, flowers, shrubs. What was pictured in the presentation is a theme park. But so Dallas so wanting to be "world class." 

James080
James080

They are trying to convince the public that nine miles of the Trinity River, with this tiny little parkway tucked way, way off to the side of the levy, will be exactly like the DECK PARK, everyone's favorite urban recreation destination. Typical bait and switch.

raymondmcrawford
raymondmcrawford

The road whores, sensing that their beloved Trinity Toll Road project is in mortal threat of being cast aside and never built, are trying a 1998 trick on a 2014 city. 

No truer words.......

So I guess you could say that we have the main "whore house" with the pretty girls sitting at 901 Main St(DCC headquarters) and the outpost with the really ugly ones at 1500 Marilla St.
Both seem to think that they're experts at their craft.

Catbird
Catbird

@holmantx  so you're saying we should reconfigure the levees and make a water reservoir out of the Trinity; sort of like a modern version of White Rock Lake. That way Dallas Water Utilities could sell the water through it's existing distribution system and then the recreational aspects could be built around the edges and there could really be sail boats and a real Town Lake.


Sounds plausible; sounds green; sounds like a win for everyone except the road whores and their pimps and jons.


GOOD ON YOU!  

JimSX
JimSX topcommenter

And they are. But don't leave your wallet in your pants.

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

and get the state to pay for it out of that new two billion dollar fund

James080
James080

@bvckvs @James080 

There was an article about this in the DMN.

Think about recent history for a minute. This whole toll road concept is losing support faster than President Obama. The toll road backers need a game changer, and this pie in the sky wonderland park concept is absolutely designed to revive public support.

The fact that the DMN and other "mainstream media" outlets declined to show the silly graphics is likely a huge disappointment to Jordan and staff. Perhaps the MSM recognized the graphics were deceptive and opted not to play the patsy. Just musings of my own.

raymondmcrawford
raymondmcrawford

@JimSX While we are on the subject.....do you  have any observations on the fact that Jim Moroney is a member of the Dallas Citizens Council?

WaitWhat
WaitWhat

@holmantx From what I've read, you can't count on the levees to hold water without a major overhaul, and I'm not sure $2B will touch that.


And where will all the water come from?  And where does all the flood water go, if the Trinity is already full.

JFPO
JFPO

My comment in that article pointing out that it was nothing more than a city hall PR piece was deleted. Meanwhile, racist drivel in their Ebola story comment sections continues to thrive.

Montemalone
Montemalone topcommenter

@WaitWhat

To construct a reservoir would entail massive excavation in the flood plain. 

A better question would be where does all the dirt go?


I'm thinking a levee around HP/UP with one access point, and a toll gate, to fund the whole thing.


The excess water would continue to go where it goes now, Houston's faucets.

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

@WaitWhat

The levees need to be overhauled anyways.  

The Trinity Watershed fills most of the existing reservoirs in this area.  Google it to see which piece would drain to the proposed lake.  

The purpose of Prop 6 was for this kind of development:

http://stateimpact.npr.org/texas/2013/11/05/texas-water-fund-passes/

And $2 Bil is just the front-end money.  However much is needed must be provided since this is not elective.

Just get ready for people to say it can't be done.  Then remind them of the political will necessary to build all the reservoirs in the 1960s and 1970s.

The bottom line is this state has already recognized North Texas is going to need A LOT more water.

JimSX
JimSX topcommenter

@bvckvs I know traffic citations are worser than building code citations.

fordamist
fordamist

@bvckvs "One of the primary difficulties using information from the internet is a concern about it's credibility."

A. Lincoln.

leftocenter
leftocenter

@bvckvs I beg to differ.  Respected bloggers and blogsites ARE considered authortative for sourcing, if you can establish the bloggers' bona fides. 

WaitWhat
WaitWhat

@holmantx Fills most of the existing reservoirs in this area sounds a little optimistic right now, but I mostly agree with you.


What about flood control?  How high would the levees have to be?  I assume at least the lake depth, plus what they are now?

riconnel8
riconnel8

@leftocenter  If I were to depend on mainstream media for my news I'd be an ignorant, low info GOP member.  Doesn't everyone today know that mainstream media in the U.S. is owned by only several propaganda prone corporations?  I'll take a well thought out blogger over slanted, one sided mainstream media any day.

WaitWhat
WaitWhat

@holmantx Also, there are the underground sand issues that Shutze has pointed out that make digging iffy.

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