Portsmouth Herald

Dover waterfront park pavilion designs unveiled

What will it cost?

- Ian Lenahan

DOVER — A park pavilion coming to the Cohecho River waterfront developmen­t is in the works as the decades-inthe-making project moves forward.

City consultant CJ Architects has designed a two-level park pavilion to be located at the waterfront alongside the Cathartes developmen­t of 400-plus riverside residentia­l units, including apartments and townhouses, and about 26,000 square feet of commercial space. The city is building an adjacent 3.4-acre public park that will feature a public boat dock and kayak launch as part of the overall project.

CJ Architects’ vision for the park pavilion, which would have a 2,300squaref­oot footprint, includes an open porch on three sides of the structure. It would include a 700-square-foot visitor space, built-in seating, boat storage, and an informatio­nal kiosk with food and art.

“We came up with this as our base model that we feel ecompasses everything that we had been striving for,” said Carla Goodnight, principal of CJ Architects, at the committee’s meeting last week. “We have the gateway element, we have the dramatic covered gathering space, we have some boat area set aside, a grand staircase coming down, a vendor here and support bathrooms.”

The company is in the midst of finalizing bid documents and constructi­on estimates for the project but currently anticipate­s it will cost around $1.6 million, according to Deputy City Manager Christophe­r Parker.

The final cost projection won’t be known until the constructi­on bid period is open and responses are received.

The city has applied for and received a Land Water Conservati­on Fund grant worth $500,000, Parker added. In its applicatio­n, the city noted it expected constructi­on costs to be around $1.3 million.

“This will make the project, no matter the final cost, be more viable,” Parker said of the grant award.

The Cochecho Waterfront Developmen­t Advisory Committee voted unanimousl­y on Sept. 26 to approve CJ Architects’ pavilion design.

“It’s a great, iconic building for this space that will again be viewed from not only the developmen­t side that we’re working on, but from across the river, as well,” committee chairperso­n Norm Fracassa at the meeting. “Especially being out on somewhat of a point, you’ll be seeing this structure from multiple different places in the city.”

Parker told the committee the City Council will need to approve the Land Water Conservati­on Fund grant for the project.

“We need to create something that we can maintain that’s usable and realistic but not off the shelf of some home improvemen­t store,” Parker said last week.

According to Goodnight, the pavilion would be winterized in the offseason.

“There won’t be enough activity in the offseason to warrant running it,” Goodnight stated last week.

Dover leaders, representa­tives of Cathartes and members of the public attended a groundbrea­king ceremony for the waterfront developmen­t project in June.

Waterfront project manager Jamie Stevens informed the committee last week that the city is aiming to have a “pad ready” site for Cathartes to begin one of its buildings by April 1, 2024.

 ?? CJ ARCHITECTS ?? CJ Architects has designed a pavilion park that would be built along the Cochecho River in Dover as part of the city’s long-awaited mixed-use waterfront developmen­t project.
CJ ARCHITECTS CJ Architects has designed a pavilion park that would be built along the Cochecho River in Dover as part of the city’s long-awaited mixed-use waterfront developmen­t project.

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