Anonymous wrote:Reading through this what an obnoxious group of people. You want the city to build you a private pool for $12 million? Really?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not up to the community as defined by immediate residents.
I was persuaded by the report of how much the immediate residents do to maintain Hearst Park. Clearly their views should count, too.
Their views will be noted. As will the views of the other 77,000 residents of Ward 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not up to the community as defined by immediate residents.
I was persuaded by the report of how much the immediate residents do to maintain Hearst Park. Clearly their views should count, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not up to the community as defined by immediate residents.
I was persuaded by the report of how much the immediate residents do to maintain Hearst Park. Clearly their views should count, too.
Anonymous wrote:It's not up to the community as defined by immediate residents.
Anonymous wrote:It's not up to the community as defined by immediate residents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
There's some slight of hand going on with the soccer field. As noted above, the lines were shrunk to conceal how small it is, in all options it is considerably smaller than currently, and not really a usable shape for soccer. The field is the same size in option 1 and option 3. They could have kept it the same size as it is currently in option 1, but instead they added a row of trees. I assume that was done so they could say that taking away a tennis court doesn't result in a bigger field. Option 2 shrinks it even further.
It appears that is a lot of slight of hand going on: with the soccer field, with the pool, with the trees. The site is just not big enough, and the right of way only allows access to the park off of Idaho, and adds land area to the project size in order to allow more of the park to be built out while complying with zoning. The soccer field as configured is much, much, much smaller. The pool does not show all of the vehicle access, pumping facilities, etc. and even as shown is much, much smaller than the current smallest pool in DC which is the Georgetown pool on Volta. Moving forward with any of these options is irresponsible from a planning, environmental and fiscal standpoint.
It almost seems like DPR is just going through the motions on a pool. Councilmember Cheh decreed that there shall be a Ward 3 pool, and lo, that it be at Hearst. DPR staff made it pretty clear that Hearst was not their decision. So now the choice is to build the smallest public pool in DC and check it off the 'to do' list, even though the size seems like a waste of a lot of money, or at some point to concede the obvious and quietly drop the pool at this site.
Anonymous wrote:Recreation Center cannot really be upgraded much more than it is because of historic preservation. The upper field is virtually brand new - doesn't make sense to alter it at this time.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
There's some slight of hand going on with the soccer field. As noted above, the lines were shrunk to conceal how small it is, in all options it is considerably smaller than currently, and not really a usable shape for soccer. The field is the same size in option 1 and option 3. They could have kept it the same size as it is currently in option 1, but instead they added a row of trees. I assume that was done so they could say that taking away a tennis court doesn't result in a bigger field. Option 2 shrinks it even further.
It appears that is a lot of slight of hand going on: with the soccer field, with the pool, with the trees. The site is just not big enough, and the right of way only allows access to the park off of Idaho, and adds land area to the project size in order to allow more of the park to be built out while complying with zoning. The soccer field as configured is much, much, much smaller. The pool does not show all of the vehicle access, pumping facilities, etc. and even as shown is much, much smaller than the current smallest pool in DC which is the Georgetown pool on Volta. Moving forward with any of these options is irresponsible from a planning, environmental and fiscal standpoint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like if they can place the tennis courts where they are in option 3, then why not put a much bigger pool where the tennis courts are currently located. Then the space where the pool is in the option could become open green space.
I agree. A bigger pool where the tennis courts are currently seems to make a whole lot of sense.