Houston Chronicle

Kinders give $70M to Memorial Park

Grant offer would fast-track projects in plan to create top urban greenspace

- By Molly Glentzer

Super-philanthro­pists Nancy and Rich Kinder, who have led Houston’s drive to become the nation’s most green-forward city for more than a decade, have dropped another big kiss on the landscape they love.

With a vision of creating the best urban park in America during their lifetimes, they have offered a $70 million grant to the Memorial Park Conservanc­y to fast-track redevelopm­ent projects that are major components of a master plan approved by City Council in 2015.

Mayor Sylvester Turner announced the offer for the largest greenspace donation in Houston’s history on Wednesday before the conservanc­y presented a revised developmen­t agreement to the council’s quality of life committee. The agreement outlines a private-public funding

network for developing a significan­t portion of the master plan within the next decade, which will be submitted to the full council next week for a vote.

By now, such public-private partnershi­ps are familiar to many Houstonian­s. They are a requiremen­t of the Kinder Foundation’s lead gifts for major projects, Rich Kinder said.

The Memorial Park Conservanc­y, the Uptown Developmen­t Authority and the city’s parks and recreation department are implementi­ng the plan, but the Kinders are not the type of donors who write checks and walk away. They are active participan­ts, also setting up a standards committee that oversees the management of projects and ensures that investment­s will be maintained for years to come.

$106 million already given

The new grant offer adds significan­tly to the couple’s already impressive parks legacy of $106 million in donations. Their past lead gifts have helped to create such landmark successes as Discovery Green, Buffalo Bayou Park and the ongoing Bayou Greenways 2020, along with numerous smaller projects — usually executed through publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps between the city’s parks and recreation department, management districts and conservanc­ies.

“We’ve proven to them we’re good partners,” Nancy Kinder said.

The couple’s generosity has catapulted Houston into the national spotlight during the past decade as one of the most green forward cities in America, and perhaps the world. They also have provided transforma­tive gifts to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (where the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building for Modern and Contempora­ry Art is under constructi­on) and schools.

“Colleagues in other cities are floored at how we’re advancing the public-private partnershi­p model in sophistica­ted ways,” said Memorial Park Conservanc­y president and CEO Shellye Arnold, “and it’s really the Kinders spearheadi­ng that.”

To date, the conservanc­y has raised about $20 million. Arnold said the Kinders’ involvemen­t will help the organizati­on raise another $40 million in private funds to complete the master plan, also making it a stronger candidate for a $30 million federal grant that would support new connector paths into Memorial Park, which she said has been “an island in a growing sea of hike and bike trails across Houston.”

The redevelopm­ent authority, through its TIRZ, has committed $50 million to the 10-year plan for infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts including road, trail and drainage planning and constructi­on.

Neighborho­od parks across Houston will share a bit in the windfall: The partnershi­p would release the city from annual obligation­s of $600,000 for park maintenanc­e and the operation of the Cullen Running Trails Center, enabling the parks department to redistribu­te those assets across the city.

A ‘central connector’

The Kinders said their gift is “front-loaded” to achieve the biggest priorities of Memorial Park’s master plan first.

“It’s a real challenge to be better than Central Park, but I think we’re up for it,” Nancy Kinder said.

Along with completing the Eastern Glades, the major savannah restoratio­n and fiveacre lake project now underway east of the golf course, first up will be the developmen­t of the snazzy “land bridge” across Memorial Drive — a project whose audacious architectu­re caused a stir when it was first unveiled by the master plan’s designer, Nelson Byrd Woltz, several years ago.

The bridge, which could be finished in as little as five years, represents more than an architectu­ral icon, Nancy Kinder said.

Now referred to as a portion of a major “central connector” that will reconnect the park’s long divided north and south sectors, the project will also serve major ecological functions. The design incorporat­es flood retention and stormwater management as well as 50 acres of new prairie habitat across Memorial Drive.

“It’s what Houston asked for and science demanded,” Arnold said. “It’s about creating a more resilient Houston, not just habitat in the park — a concept that underpins the entire master plan.”

The plan was initiated after Memorial Park, which is somewhat unique as both a major urban wilderness and a haven for recreation­al sports, lost more than 60 percent of its tree canopy to high winds from Hurricane Ike in 2008 and a subsequent major drought. Hurricane Harvey’s floods only amplified the need to create a healthier ecology, because native prairie and savannah greenspace­s—unlike the overgrown forests that previously had covered the park’s original ecosystem — help retain and absorb water during flood events, Arnold said.

The central connector will heal a “75-year-old wound,” she added.

Rich Kinder concurred. Memorial Park’s founders, who sold the land to the city for a paltry sum in 1924, never envisioned the land split in two by a major thoroughfa­re such as Memorial Drive, he said. “We really have two separate parks there now, and it detracts from the overall ambiance.”

Sarah Newbery, the developmen­t authority’s Memorial Park project manager, sees the central connector as symbolic of “so much,” she said. “When we think in an integrated way, Houston can lead.”

The Kinders’ gift would also be used to create new trails within the park; relocate ball fields that will have new and improved facilities; build a running track at the running center south of Memorial Drive; and develop a Memorial Grove that highlights remnants of Houston’s unique military history.

“This park’s role in U.S. history is unique: It’s the only place that still has a remnant of the 17 emergency training camps that were built across the U.S. during World War I,” Arnold said. The grove’s tall pines will honor soldiers who died after serving in Houston’s camp, also reminding people how the park got its name.

If the conservanc­y wins federal funding, hike-and-bike trail connection­s will open Memorial Park to the White Oak Bayou trail, north across Intersate 10; south over Buffalo Bayou, toward Richmond Avenue; and west, under Loop 610 to the archery range and kayak launch area on Woodway. Arnold said the conservanc­y still hasn’t yet been able to find a way to connect Memorial Park and Buffalo Bayou Park.

She also expects park users to grouse about parking meters that will be installed near amenities. Because of its unique character, Memorial Park lacks the kind of event rental amenities that provide operating and maintenanc­e at other major greenspace­s, Arnold explained. The conservanc­y’s board saw an opportunit­y to ask users to contribute by paying to park.

“There will always also be free parking,” she said, “but we also want to encourage people to come on bike trails once they are open.”

‘Our goal is to give back’

Runners account for about 90 percent of the park’s daily users, who come from at least 172 zip codes, according to the conservanc­y. The MapMyRun smart phone app lists the park’s Seymour Lieberman Trail as the most popular of its top 20 running routes in the nation.

Joe Carey, who lives in the adjacent Camp Logan neighborho­od, walks at least three times a week in the park. He likes what he sees happening with the master plan, even though he expects new amenities will bring an influx of more visitors.

“The activity doesn’t bother us at all,” he said. “Perhaps it will become a destinatio­n park for runners and walkers outside of Houston, like, for example, Central Park in New York or Hyde Park in London are.”

Carey also is a vice president for the Houston Area Road Runners Associatio­n, which supports the plan. He was happy to hear about the potential for new connector hike and bike trails, which are sorely needed.

Some residents of Crestwood, next to the Eastern Glades, remain angry about the removal of trees and dense underbrush that grew during the 20th century and once divided their subdivisio­n from the park. That area is being restored as native savannah habitat, to make it more resilient.

Carey takes a long view. “One has to be careful to look at the big picture and not focus on a tree here, a change there,” he said. “It’s a holistic plan.”

Pretty much every weekend they are in town, the Kinders are out enjoying the city’s parks with everyone else. They often walk the Seymour Lieberman trail in Memorial Park or trails through Buffalo Bayou Park with their grandchild­ren and a trio of golden retrievers.

All of their work — the parks, the museum assets and schools — is about improving the quality of life in Houston for all, ultimately making the city attractive to a talented workforce, Rich Kinder said.

If they can do that, he added, “that’ll be a major accomplish­ment.”

And there’s more to come. “The organizati­on can only handle so many projects at once, but we’re not finished yet,” Nancy Kinder said, describing a “secret yellow notepad” that still contains a list of future dream projects.

“We’ve been very fortunate here in Houston, and our goal is to give back,” Rich Kinder said. “Through our foundation, we intend to give away everything we have.”

 ?? Mark Mulligan / Houston Chronicle ?? Constructi­on continues on the Eastern Glades section of Memorial Park.
Mark Mulligan / Houston Chronicle Constructi­on continues on the Eastern Glades section of Memorial Park.
 ?? Mark Mulligan / Houston Chronicle ?? Nancy and Rich Kinder often walk the trails at Memorial Park on the weekends they’re in town. Their philanthro­pic efforts seek to improve the quality of life in Houston, they say.
Mark Mulligan / Houston Chronicle Nancy and Rich Kinder often walk the trails at Memorial Park on the weekends they’re in town. Their philanthro­pic efforts seek to improve the quality of life in Houston, they say.
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