Chattanooga Times Free Press

East Lake Park’s makeover could be done by next summer

- BY PAUL LEACH STAFF WRITER

East Lake Park could be reborn by this time next year.

A water quality project, shepherded by Chattanoog­a’s Public Works Department, calls for cleaning up the park’s algae-choked duck pond and restoring its natural balance. Before it’s over, the 1.75-acre pond will be drained, dredged of sediment buildup and refilled. Concept plans also call for outdoor classroom spaces, a boardwalk and other amenities for the park, which stretches across 18.5 acres in all.

In a recent meeting, Mounir Minkara, manager of the city’s water quality program, discussed the project with the Chattanoog­a City Council.

“We are using a holistic approach to look at the whole park, not just the lake itself,” Minkara said. “We can clean the pond now, but we need to [prevent] this from happening in the future.”

This means creating a wetland area upstream to naturally filter nutrients from runoff, reducing roadway sediment flows into the pond and managing the waterfowl population, he said. Controllin­g the park’s ducks and geese, whose waste creates a nutrient imbalance in the pond, could possibly be achieved by the public not feeding them.

The pond’s rehabilita­tion also requires reducing or eliminatin­g exotic species of aquatic plants and replacing them with native species, Minkara said.

“The existing conditions are actually impaired,” Minkara said. “There’s no balance in the ecosystem.”

Public Works Administra­tor Justin Holland said the $748,000 project has been in the works for four years, and he praised Minkara’s team for working with community leaders and nearby schools in the initial phase of the park overhaul.

The conceptual plans drew heavily from community feedback, including school design competitio­ns, Minkara said.

The project timeline calls for engineerin­g firm CDM Smith to finalize the revamped park design by mid-October and prepare specificat­ions and bid documents by Dec. 1. Bids will be opened Dec. 20, and constructi­on will begin in January.

The $135,000 CDM Smith design agreement, approved by the city council last month, includes a $113,400 option for the company to conduct more public meetings and design a pump and treatment system for the East Lake Park pond.

The constructi­on phase is estimated to cost $400,000, with the Lyndhurst Foundation awarding $100,000 toward the expense. The foundation also put $100,000 towards the assessment phase of the park’s renovation.

Councilman Erskine Oglesby recognized the East Lake Neighborho­od Associatio­n’s involvemen­t in the project, singling out associatio­n president Lisa Davis.

“This has been a process that has been a partnershi­p and a shared vision,” Oglesby said. “This associatio­n has worked real hard to talk about the things they wanted to see in this park.”

Contact staff writer Paul Leach at 423-757-6481 or pleach@timesfreep­ress.com. Follow him on Twitter @pleach_tfp.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? A wetland area could be a part of East Lake Park’s transforma­tion.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND A wetland area could be a part of East Lake Park’s transforma­tion.
 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? A duck perches on an East Lake Park railing. Restrictio­ns on feeding the park’s ducks could be part of its transforma­tion.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND A duck perches on an East Lake Park railing. Restrictio­ns on feeding the park’s ducks could be part of its transforma­tion.

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