Westside Eagle-Observer

Nature center to open this week

- Arkansas Game and Fish Commission

SPRINGDALE — After more than four years of planning, preparatio­n and constructi­on, the J.B. and Johnelle Hunt Family Ozark Highlands Nature Center will open its doors to the public this month.

The center, situated at 3400 North 40th Street in Springdale, will open to the public, beginning Friday, Dec. 11, but a special ribbon-cutting ceremony will be held Thursday, Dec. 10, following the AGFC’s December Commission meeting scheduled at the facility. Because of social-distancing guidelines advised by the Arkansas Department of Health, the Commission meeting and ceremony will only be open to media and invited guests, but the ribboncutt­ing will be streamed live on the nature center’s Facebook page and the meeting will be hosted on the AGFC’s YouTube channel.

“We have a lot of interest from the community about the center and field calls and emails daily about when it will open, so we’re excited about the event,” Tabbi Kinion, AGFC chief of education, said.

Visiting the Ozark Highlands Nature Center is free, thanks to Amendment 75 and the 1/8th-cent Conservati­on Fund, but reserved entry tickets will be required to coordinate visits and manage attendance in accordance with social-distancing guidelines. Guests may reserve tickets at www.agfc.com/ ozarkhighl­ands in advance of their trip. Up to 10 tickets may be reserved per party.

The center will be open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday and 1-5 p.m. Sundays.

As more teachers and educators begin to plan for possible field trips and outings, the new nature center also will offer some limited small group experience­s in its outdoor facilities. Recently named program coordinato­r, Steven Dunlap, who has worked with educators in Northwest Arkansas for years, will head up programmin­g at the center as well as manage the educationa­l opportunit­ies from the center through teleconfer­encing applicatio­ns and site visits within social-distancing procedures.

According to Chris Colclasure, deputy director of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, this nature center relied much more heavily on partnershi­ps with private individual­s and organizati­ons than most other AGFC projects.

A $5 million matching pledge from Johnelle Hunt of Springdale was answered by many organizati­ons working through the Foundation. The land where the center stands originally belonged to the Springdale water and sewer district, which deeded it to the city of Springdale, which in turn donated it to the AGFC, contingent on it being used for conservati­on and education. More than $14 million in private funding, land donations and federal grants were secured to create a 32,000-square-foot facility on nearly 62 acres in Northwest Arkansas.

Along with the main exhibit hall, the center offers three indoor classrooms, an indoor archery and BB gun marksmansh­ip center, staff offices and a maintenanc­e facility. Two pavilions serve as outdoor classroom spaces and an extensive outdoor 3-D archery range challenges visitors with a variety of shot angles along the center’s 25-acre restored prairie. The center also features an extensive trail system, which will connect to the Razorback Greenway in 2021, making it a must-see stop along the route.

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