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2 hours ago, Guy Chamberlin said:

Hey! This is MY thread. And I say we can talk about any city, and anybody who lives in a city or has been to a city, and anything that they might be thinking about. Or not.

 

Yeah, I was wondering why I was being apologized to. :D

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On 7/2/2020 at 3:22 PM, Guy Chamberlin said:

Hey! This is MY thread. And I say we can talk about any city, and anybody who lives in a city or has been to a city, and anything that they might be thinking about. Or not.

You are right  - this is your thread!!  Knapp I take back my apology and raise it and give 2 to Guy!

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On 7/2/2020 at 1:11 PM, FrantzHardySwag said:

This is so fricking cool! What an awesome concept, had no idea this existed.

 

Seconded. That looks very, very cool. Would love to see it in person if I'm ever in the area.

 

Since we moved northward I've been exploring the Michigan scenery a bit and enjoying it but haven't found anything quite that elegant.

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37 minutes ago, Danny Bateman said:

 

Seconded. That looks very, very cool. Would love to see it in person if I'm ever in the area.

 

Since we moved northward I've been exploring the Michigan scenery a bit and enjoying it but haven't found anything quite that elegant.

It is what $400 million can buy.   But the purpose was to be a place where generations of Tulsans can come together regardless of financial condition (it is all free except the food of course)  or status and enjoy with family, friends, and fellow Tulsans - thus the name The Gathering Place.  The large 3 story castle like rope swing. bridge 'playset' had lumber from the actual Black Forest in Germany -  it was built over there and reassembled in Tulsa.   They used native sand stone throughout, the 'lodge' itself is a work of art.

They shut down Riverside Drive for 2+ years  - built tunnels for the rebuilt Riverside Drive so that the park could be extended over Riverside Drive to the River Park area (a 12 mile long park which connects to city wide bike trails) and its trails and they also created all of the basketball, roller blade park and tennis courts on that side as well.    The 2019 spring floods did flood some of the courts but stayed out of the main part of the park.  The park opened in Oct 2018, had the flood in 2019 and was shut for a while, and then was shut for covid. 

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  • 3 months later...

Ok, I had to rub it into Wichita one more time - which also sits on the Arkansas river. 

Tulsa just announced the new pedestrian bridge over the river - connecting to the above mentioned Gathering Place on the east to the west side park.  Not your ordinary bridge like the Gathering Place is not your ordinary park.

 

https://www.cityoftulsa.org/media/3614/bridge-design-finalist-1.pdf

 

image.thumb.png.28705673c4367232d3645443efe88146.png

 

image.thumb.png.b0cb1f44b7decc9f427f2b9efaa75d1a.png

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  • 4 months later...

Had to throw this in as a proud Tulsan

 

 

https://tulsaworld.com/news/local/gatheringplace/gathering-place-named-best-city-park-in-the-country-in-usa-today-poll/article_e06c8a36-77ab-11eb-87bc-47c037c32ee1.html

 

This picture is missing the southern 3rd of the park wt the basketball, tennis courts, skate board park, bike park,   limestone rock entrance,  and also where phase 2 is being built - an interactive children's museum and learning center.    If you got kids, come visit.  It is free.

https://www.gatheringplace.org

603822e1073f4.image.jpg?resize=1200,699

 

 

Quote

 

Gathering Place has been voted this year’s Best City Park in the country in a readers’ choice competition sponsored by the national media company USA Today.

The announcement comes two years after the park won the news outlet’s 10 Best Readers’ Choice Award for Best New Attraction.

“I think what the pandemic has shown is that the team in place at Gathering Place is what makes it world class,” said Mayor G.T. Bynum. “The facility is amazing and one of a kind, but the programming the team continues to put together — always seeking ways to make the park inviting and accessible to all Tulsans — in the midst of a global pandemic has been extraordinary.”

 

Gathering Place beat out other parks from across the country to win the award, including Balboa Park in San Diego, Boston Common in Massachusetts and Herrman Park in Houston.

The nominated parks were selected by tourism and park experts, including USA Today’s 10Best.com editors. The competition was open to the public for four weeks, with voters limited to casting one vote per nominee per category daily.

 
 

Gathering Place Executive Director Tony Moore said the park continued to draw big crowds even last year, when it closed for several months because of the pandemic and had to limit hours and access to certain areas.

 

We did 2.2 million (visitors) in a COVID year,” Moore said.

 

Phase one of Gathering Place opened in September 2018. The 66.5-acre park stretches along both sides of Riverside Drive for more than a mile, offering a mix of eye-popping and challenging attractions for children of all ages, a pond for kayaking and canoeing, basketball courts, a skate park, a lodge, a boathouse and other amenities.

“Anyone building a new park right now they are certainly coming to the Gathering Place to look and see what we did,” Moore said. “Fun is clearly integrated in our DNA, but we’ve also not neglected the social and the educational” aspects.

 

Lt. Gov. Matt Pinnell calls the park a show-stopping recruitment tool.

 

“For us to rebrand the state of Oklahoma the right way, to get away from this Dust Bowl brand, and to become a globally recognized brand, the Gathering Place has to play a central role in that,” Pinnell said. “The Oklahoma City Thunder and the Gathering Place have to be in the middle of a lot of the rebranding efforts that we are making to the state.”

 

In addition to the two USA Today awards, Gathering Place has won eight national and international awards.

Gathering Place represents the largest private gift to a public park in U.S. history. Donated to the River Parks Authority by the George Kaiser Family Foundation, which gave $200 million (including $50 million in land), it has received $200 million in pledges from corporate and community philanthropists. The city contributed $65 million in park infrastructure and improvements to Riverside Drive.

 

 

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