The Commercial Appeal

Tom Lee Park lives out its potential with renovation

The park will be a representa­tion of what Memphis was and what it can be.

- Your Turn Carol Coletta Guest columnist

On Wednesday, Memphis celebrated a groundbrea­king for Tom Lee Park that has been a century in the making.

Almost 100 years ago, in 1924, the city’s very first comprehens­ive plan deemed the riverfront “one of the city’s most prized assets” – “the front yard of Memphis”-and called for the developmen­t of a grand gateway and arrival point.

Thirteen subsequent city plans repeated the call to showcase the riverfront. Although attempts were made to fulfill the ambition of these plans – most notably Mud Island River Park in 1982 and Beale Street Landing in 2014 – the resulting projects were mostly disconnect­ed from the city and the rest of the riverfront.

While Memphis was moving slowly or not at all, cities everywhere were ambitiousl­y reclaiming their waterfront­s in

ways that were connected and catalytic. Nashville, Louisville, Tampa, New York, and Chicago are just a few of the cities that have understood the lure of water and made it easy, safe and fun for people to enjoy it cityside.

Three years ago, Mayor Jim Strickland formed a Riverfront Steering Committee to take stock of all the previous riverfront plans and reconsider the opportunit­y Memphis has to reconnect with its river.

Since the completion of that review, two former Confederat­e parks have been remade and five miles of riverfront connected by the River Line Trail, knitting together the trail work already done by those who created Green Belt Park, the awe-inspiring Bluff Walk, and the magnificent Big River Crossing.

The next move is a big one—the transforma­tion of the 31-acre Tom Lee Park into signature public space on our riverfront.

Big plans for Tom Lee Park

The case has been made for Tom Lee Park as the logical next move for the riverfront in contempora­ry times. It is, as the planners said so many years ago, the city's front door, delivering for so many their first impression of Memphis.

It's adjacent to downtown, making it the most accessible piece of riverfront of significant size and the most catalytic for nearby developmen­t. Its location is pivotal to join the riverfront north to south and the riverfront to the city west to east.

The park will continue as home to a much-loved Memphis in May, while being a generous, welcoming, no-admission-required space the other 358 days a year. This newly green acreage at the edge of the Mississipp­i will deliver obvious physical and mental health benefits, while showcasing leading-edge environmen­tal interventi­ons.

But the new Tom Lee Park's greatest value is to make a place where Memphians can, as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. put it, “live in dialogue.” When he said those words in a 1962 speech to Cornell College, King was specifically describing the need for places that bring whites and blacks together.

You might think almost 60 years later, this would be a quaint idea. Unfortunat­ely, it is not, although today's monologue in Memphis is more likely to break along the lines of income versus race. In this Black city, however, race still has an overarchin­g effect on space.

Without spaces like the Tom Lee Park we are building—spaces with enough access and allure to attract people across the inequities created and reinforced by policy and practice— Memphis will continue to grapple with the problem King so aptly described six decades ago.

“Men hate each other because they fear each other,” he told his audience at Cornell College. "They fear each other because they don't know each other, and they don't know each other because they don't communicat­e with each other, and they don't communicat­e with each other because they are separated from each other.”

Tom Lee Park will be a beacon for all of Memphis and Shelby County

Memphis is a city, like so many, that has slipped easily into separation. We see it in the patterns of poverty, housing, and school performanc­e. We know it when we hear which side of town is considered “safe” and which side, unsafe. We applaud public and private investment­s that sometimes unwittingl­y perpetuate the divisions among us.

We participat­e in its making in many small ways, as when we abandon the store that's looking a little tired for the new one that attracts “preferred” customers, magnifying and reinforcin­g growing schisms, even in our most mundane and universal activities.

Among great public spaces, Tom Lee Park is in a unique location, but the reason is rarely discussed.

Yes, it is on the Mississipp­i adjacent to downtown, where developmen­t momentum has been strong over the past few years and household income is growing.

But it is also six blocks from the poorest zip code in the state and within walking and biking distance of the crescent of persistent­ly poor neighborho­ods sitting just outside downtown.

Tom Lee Park is one of the few places in Memphis and Shelby County that is easily accessible and equally welcoming to people across race and income. It is a place where we can, if we choose, “live in dialogue.”

Even though we are separated in too many ways, there is so much more that unites us than divides us.

Tom Lee Park is a place whose very name calls forth a story of one man's literal reach across deep divisions of race and class at enormous risk to himself.

The park will stand as a daily reminder of that, giving us the place to be one Memphis.

And there is no smarter investment we can make.

Carol Coletta is president and CEO of Memphis River Parks Partnershi­p.

Tom Lee Park is a place whose very name calls forth a story of one man’s literal reach across deep divisions of race and class at enormous risk to himself.

 ?? STUDIO GANG ?? A rendering shows a pathway that flows down the bluff to connect downtown Memphis to the new Tom Lee Park from Beale Street. Wide steps provide
places to sit and take in the views of the park and the riv er beyond.
STUDIO GANG A rendering shows a pathway that flows down the bluff to connect downtown Memphis to the new Tom Lee Park from Beale Street. Wide steps provide places to sit and take in the views of the park and the riv er beyond.
 ?? JOE RONDONE/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Winners are announced in a culminatio­n of the Memphis in May World Championsh­ip Barbecue Cooking Contest in Tom Lee Park on May 18, 2019.
JOE RONDONE/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Winners are announced in a culminatio­n of the Memphis in May World Championsh­ip Barbecue Cooking Contest in Tom Lee Park on May 18, 2019.
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 ?? ARIEL COBBERT/ THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? People get out for fresh air at Tom Lee Park in downtown Memphis on May 23.
ARIEL COBBERT/ THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL People get out for fresh air at Tom Lee Park in downtown Memphis on May 23.

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