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Will City Park's new design be a good one for the average golfer?
Peter Finney
The Times-Picayune
8/17/2011

Among the many stories coming out of the PGA Championship that ended Sunday at the Atlanta Athletic Club was a brickbat flung by one of the prominent touring pros: “Modern architecture is killing the game.”

That’s what Phil Mickelson, winner of four major championships, said. Not for the first time, Mickelson was being critical of course-designer Rees Jones, who has designed championship layouts around the world. It was Jones who renovated AAC in 2006 for this year’s major championship, and, of course, for AAC members, as well. Which is where Mickelson took aim.

“The course is great for the PGA Championship, but it’s not great for the membership,” he said.

I bring this up only because the course being designed for City Park’s post-Katrina golf comeback is in the hands of Rees Jones, Inc., a layout City Park officials said will offer “a high-end golf experience and will be challenging for every type of golfer.”

My main question: How challenging will it be for the public golfer, the average Joe?


New Orleans City Park officials optimistic about championship golf course
By Frank Donze
The Times-Picayune
8/7/2011

By most accounts, the ongoing recovery at New Orleans' City Park from an estimated $43 million in damage caused by Hurricane Katrina has been remarkable, as beloved attractions return better than ever and flashy, new ones come on line.

The lone pothole on the park's comeback trail has been the inability of administrators to close a deal with private investors on a proposed championship golf course.
While officials have delivered project after project on time and on budget, the plans for a $24.5 million development on the site of the shuttered East and West courses remain on the drawing boards.

But as Katrina's sixth anniversary approaches, City Park CEO Bob Becker said he believes good news is finally on the way. "We feel like we're pretty close to finalizing an agreement,'' Becker said last week, expressing optimism that the 35-member City Park board of commissioners could consider a contract proposal with the Bayou District Foundation as early as October or November.


City Park soccer pavilion construction is under way
By Frank Donze
The Times-Picayune
7/29/2011

Add a soccer pavilion to the growing list of new attractions popping up all over City Park.
Work crews recently broke ground on the $450,000 project that will service four soccer fields sandwiched between the Orleans Avenue Canal and Marconi Drive near Harrison Avenue.

The facility, scheduled to open by year's end, will occupy a portion of a gravel parking lot adjacent to the southernmost field.

Park officials said the pavilion will offer much-needed amenities for the thousands of elementary and high school players, family members and fans who flock to the year-round facility, particularly on weekends.

In addition to a 2,000-square-foot covered patio and a small concession area, the building will include restrooms.


New Orleans City Park welcomes new Big Lake enhancements, plans for more
By Frank Donze
The Times-Picayune
6/27/2011

As City Park marks the completion of the latest enhancements to its popular Big Lake attraction Tuesday, officials are looking ahead to the next phase: a boathouse featuring a small waterfront restaurant.
The nonprofit Trust for Public Land, which has spent $2.6 million in private dollars on the project to date, is optimistic that more cash is on the way and that construction on the new eatery could begin next year.


Smaller City Park golf plan approved
Frank Donze
Times-Picayune
3/23/2011

With an eye toward closing a long-discussed deal with a golf developer in the next few months, the City Park Improvement Association gave its unanimous approval Tuesday to a scaled-down plan that reduces by 20 percent the land set aside for a proposed championship course.


A TENNIS COMPLEX -- the latest in a string of new attractions at New Orleans City Park
Frank Donze
Times-Picayune
3/22/2011

New Orleans' premier public tennis venue, rooted on Victory Avenue in the heart of City Park for more than a century, is moving.

On Thursday morning, park officials will cut the ribbon at their new $3.9 million tennis complex on a once-dormant tract along Marconi Drive between Harrison Avenue and Interstate 610. The City Park/Pepsi Tennis Center, which features 26 courts and a clubhouse, is the latest in a string of flashy attractions that are altering the face of the urban playground that was left in ruins after Hurricane Katrina.


City Park golf course project is nearing 18th hole
By Frank Donze
The Times-Picayune
3/13/2011

A painstaking push to restore City Park’s storm-battered golf complex appears to be nearing an end as officials consider a scaled-down version they hope will lead to a long-term management agreement for a proposed championship course.

The revised plan — which scuttles a 9-hole course and reduces from 310 acres to 250 acres the space needed for the new, 18-hole layout — is scheduled to go before the City Park board of commissioners on March 22.


City Park miniature golf complex construction is to begin in March
Frank Donze
The Times-Picayune
1/1/2011

As City Park continues to study an ambitious proposal from a private developer to overhaul its storm-battered golf complex between Interstate 610 and Filmore Avenue, officials are ready to go it alone on a smaller version of the game.

Construction is slated to start in March on a $1.2 million miniature golf complex along Victory Avenue across from Storyland and the popular children's amusement park.


Children's Museum looks to City Park
Move would expand its scope, offerings

Katie Urbaszewski
Times Picayune
5/23/2010

Though the plan is not yet definite, the Louisiana Children's Museum has raised about $7 million for a potential move to City Park, an ambitious project that would drastically expand the museum and its programs.

Tentatively slated to break ground in 2012 and open in 2014, the new location in the park, called the Early Learning Village, would be twice the size of the museum's Warehouse District building. It would take advantage of the park setting and bring community resources together to assist parents and entertain children.

In the meantime, City Park has reserved a site of about 10 acres not far from the New Orleans Museum of Art and near Roosevelt Mall.


Developers coming to City Park's golf courses
James Gill
Times-Picayune
4/7/2010

Our championship-level golf course on the west bank has flopped, requiring close to $30 million in taxpayer subsidies over the last few years, but are we discouraged?

No, sir. The way we figure it, if one PGA-style course proves ruinous, the best way to make a bunch of money is to build another one, this time in City Park.

Mr. Micawber would approve of the business plan. Park commissioners must figure something will turn up, because, having received three proposals, they have given the nod to one with a budget that exceeds the available cash by $9 million.
The park had three run-of-the-mill courses before Katrina, but only one has been open since. That has meant a lot of wasted space, with nothing but meadows, a bunch of trees, lagoons, birds swooping and fish jumping. The peace and quiet almost makes you think you're in the country. We obviously need to bring in the developers.

In fact, we do. City Park cannot survive without generating revenue, and golf has helped keep the wolf from the door for decades. The old North Course still does, and remains a popular hang-out for decent players and duffers alike.

Locals wanting to see PGA action have an opportunity every year when the Zurich Classic is held at the Tournament Players Club course near Avondale, which has otherwise been a disaster. The Mike Foster administration put taxpayers on the hook if not enough hackers showed up for the rest of the year to keep the course solvent. We have been bleeding money ever since.

Proponents of the new course at City Park course presumably figure it will take over the Zurich tournament. That will give taxpayers even more reason to rue the Avondale folly.

City Park has $16 million state and federal cash in hand, which would be enough to build a splendiferous 18 holes.


Fore! Here come the developers
James Gill
Times Picayune
4/7/2010

Our championship-level golf course on the west bank has flopped, requiring close to $30 million in taxpayer subsidies over the last few years, but are we discouraged?

No, sir. The way we figure it, if one PGA-style course proves ruinous, the best way to make a bunch of money is to build another one, this time in City Park.

Mr. Micawber would approve of the business plan. Park commissioners must figure something will turn up, because, having received three proposals, they have given the nod to one with a budget that exceeds the available cash by $9 million.
The park had three run-of-the-mill courses before Katrina, but only one has been open since. That has meant a lot of wasted space, with nothing but meadows, a bunch of trees, lagoons, birds swooping and fish jumping. The peace and quiet almost makes you think you're in the country. We obviously need to bring in the developers.


Going for the Green: City Park golf complex could get independent manager
Frank Donze, Times-Picayune
4/5/2010

Five years after City Park embraced an ambitious overhaul of its storm-battered golf complex, officials are preparing to begin formal negotiations with the Bayou District Foundation, a New Orleans nonprofit group that wants to build and manage the proposed 18-hole championship course, clubhouse and driving range between Interstate 610 and Filmore Avenue.

The talks got the green light last month after the Bayou District bid received the top score among three submitted to the City Park Board of Commissioners. But Bob Becker, the park's chief executive officer, cautioned that there is no guarantee that a deal will be struck. "The negotiations will determine if an acceptable contractual arrangement can be reached,'' Becker said, adding that the final decision will rest with the 36-member City Park board. The Bayou District offer is valid through mid-May, though that date could be extended if both sides agree. Becker said a negotiating team that he will head will attempt to craft an agreement with Bayou District officials in the coming weeks. Becker said a key issue will be how the foundation intends to close a $9 million gap in financing for the project, which has an estimated price tag of $24.5 million.


Public Meetings scheduled to discuss New Orleans Master Plan
3/19/2010

District A
Tuesday, March 30th, 6 p.m. - 8 p.m.
City Park - Timken Center (old casino building) on Dreyfous Dr.
Parkview Terrace, 2nd floor


The New Orleans City Council, in coordination with the City Planning Commission, will hold public meetings in each Council District in an effort to inform and engage the public on the Master Plan, according to a press release from the council.

The council's Recovery Committee co-chairs, Cynthia Willard-Lewis and Jacquelyn Brechtel Clarkson, have scheduled the meetings from March 18-30. The public meetings will be held throughout New Orleans in each Council District.

Link to nola.com article

While the meeting may be dominated by the current threat to Audubon Park, also in District A, it is critical that all citizens continue their input into the "parks and open space" goals that are part of the new Master Plan.

For more documents and resources on the New Orleans Master Plan, visit the website.


City Park's Violation of the Open Meetings Law
info@CityParkNOLA.org
3/7/2010

In July 2009, attorney Michael Tifft filed suit against the City Park Improvement Association for violating the state's Open Meetings Law with regards to the May 26, 2009 meeting at which the 35-member Board of Directors of the CPIA unanimously adopted a resolution authorizing its staff to draft a RFP for golf courses in City Park, without any apparent or open public discussion among the Board members. Members of the public present at the May 26 public meeting were denied the opportunity to comment.

Further, the suit accused the Board of specifically avoiding open meeting law requirements by being briefed separately beforehand in small groups by the staff, in order to insure a unanimous vote without public discussion at the meeting.


Investors like what they see at former public housing
Development aims to break cycle of poverty

Katy Reckdahl, Times Picayune
3/3/2010

"New Orleans developers also hope that the community can closely follow the East Lake model, although an arrangement with City Park and its golf courses is not yet complete, according to developers. The developers noted they had responded last month to a solicitation from the park, and they hope the golf course will provide an economic engine for their Bayou District efforts. They estimate the development will cost $430 million, $300 million of it devoted to housing."

A millionaire and two billionaires toured the brand-new town houses that have replaced about 10 blocks of the St. Bernard public housing development on Tuesday, with hopes that their ideas will break the cycle of poverty in that part of New Orleans and further the success of their new national community-building organization.

As a cold wind blew hard across the Gentilly site, the developers of the site, called Columbia Parc at the Bayou District, gave a tour to legendary investor Warren Buffett. Last year, Buffett co-founded an organization called Purpose Built Communities with Atlanta commercial real-estate mogul Tom Cousins and wildly successful hedge-fund manager Julian Robertson, who was represented Tuesday by his son Alex Robertson.

As they walked through a three-bedroom, handicapped-accessible apartment, Buffett leaned over to Bayou District Foundation chairman Gerald Barousse Jr. and asked, "How far is the nearest grocery?"

"About three miles," Barousse said.

Buffett grimaced. "You'll have to give them free rent for six months or something," he said with a laugh.

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