The Sentinel-Record

Greenway Trail gets funding for last leg

- DAVID SHOWERS

A federal grant awarded to the city earlier this month promises to complete the trail leading from the Transporta­tion Plaza and Depot to the mouth of Hot Springs Creek, a project 21 years in the making.

The $500,000 Transporta­tion Alternativ­es Program grant will extend

the Hot Springs Creek Greenway Trail from the area near the creek’s intersecti­on with Golf Links Road to Television Hill Road, where the creek traverses an emerging wetland before emptying into Lake Hamilton.

The money is part of the $668,000 in TAP grants awarded to the city during the federal government’s 2016 fiscal year. The city was also awarded a $120,000 grant to extend sidewalks into the neighborho­ods near Hot Springs Middle School, and a $48,000 grant to build a 2.5-mile trail in the Northwoods area near the Lakeside Water Treatment Plant.

Parks and Trails Director Jean Wallace said Visit Hot Springs and the Hot Springs Board of Directors were instrument­al in securing the grants. The trail projects they’ll support are contingent on receiving affordable constructi­on bids, she said.

The city has a $121,000 share of the 80-20 reimbursem­ent grant for the Hot Springs Creek project, with the Friends of the Park nonprofit committing $10,000 to help with the city’s obligation.

Wallace said the Parks and Trails Department has been authorized to advertise constructi­on bids for the trail segment a fiscal year 2015 TAP grant will fund. It will take the trail about two-thirds of a mile from Seneca Street to 800 feet past the Golf Links Road bridge that spans the creek.

The area’s topography requires an elevated trail segment featuring a concrete boardwalk made to look like wood that will thread through the tree canopy. A road crossing will give pedestrian­s and bicyclists access from Golf Links.

The grant awarded earlier this month will complete the final three-fourths of a mile of the 4-mile trail. The 12-foot shareduse asphalt trail will accommodat­e bicycling, walking, hiking, running and feature two pedestrian bridges. It will end at an emerging wetland that gives onto a Lake Hamilton bay Wallace said is a spawning ground for fish.

Wallace said the area has been identified as an “emergent wetland” but could be a revitalize­d one that’s re-emerging from the adverse effects of nearby developmen­t. She said an elevated boardwalk is envisioned for the wetland area, with interpreti­ve signs that explain its ecology.

“It could be re-emerging,” she said. “It’s boggy and has wetland plants and grasses. Through the years with the siltation from the creek and the developmen­t of the property adjacent to Lake Hamilton, a lot of wetlands have been destroyed or filled in.”

The wetland identifica­tion qualifies the area for grants previously unavailabl­e to the Parks and Trails Department, Wallace said. A lack of grant money in the 1990s, coupled with the rigorous documentat­ion inherent to grant administra­tion, contribute­d to the Hot Springs Creek project extending across two decades, she said.

“In the ’90s, there was no trail grant money,” she said. “There was a drought of fund availabili­ty.”

Northwoods

A $48,000 grant will help build a 2.5-mile trail in the Northwoods, which the city identified in 2001 as a trail destinatio­n. The Student Conservati­on Associatio­n built a trail through the old growth forest in 2014, and bids have been let for another trail funded by the city.

Wallace said there are plans to build a family friendly, handicap-accessible trail along the old fire road that forms the majority of Snakehead Trail.

“Everybody’s intent is that it stays as natural and wild as possible,” she said, explaining that motorized vehicles and kayaking and sailing in the Northwood’s three city-owned lakes will be prohibited.

Public access to the area is prohibited, but a feasibilit­y study funded by a $15,000 Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism grant matched by Visit Hot Springs is assessing the potential of an urban forest park.

Visit Hot Springs has contracted with the Internatio­nal Mountain Biking Associatio­n to develop bike trails in the Northwoods. The group has designated the city as a bronze-level Ride Center for the diversity of biking trails its topography supports. Wallace said the Northwoods could include an area for mountain bikers to camp.

Wallace said a trail could eventually link the Northwoods with the Lake Ouachita Vista Trail by way of nearby Cedar Glades Park. The first half could trace the city’s easement for the 24-inch raw waterline connecting the Lake Ricks Reservoir to the Lakeside Treatment Plant.

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