Park Classification
Neighborhood Park (3-15 acres)
- Combination of passive and intense recreational activity areas, such
as a practice game field, a game court area, playground,
walking/jogging path, picnic and conversation areas, picnic ramadas,
and open play areas
- Located within a half-mile radius of residential neighborhoods and
in close proximity to multi-family complexes
- Located near schools and centered with safe walking and bike
access
- Limited non-organized sport group activities
- Limited lighting for security only
- No parking or convenience facilities are provided
- Service various age groups with emphasis on the youth
- A one to two hour experience customized to the demographic groups
who use the park
Community Park (15-40 acres)
- Combination of intense recreational activity areas, game courts,
playgrounds, walking/jogging paths, spray pools and aquatic
facilities, skate facilities, and picnic and conversation areas
- Smaller outdoor festival areas, community pools, and recreation
centers
- Located within a one-mile radius of residential neighborhoods and
light business or manufacturing districts
- Organized sport group activities
- Lighted field areas and facilities
- Convenience facilities are provided
- Service various ages, with emphasis on organized sport group
activities and potential protection of natural areas
- A two to three hour experience
Metro Park (40-200 acres)
- Focus on high-end sports facilities or attractions including
complexes for soccer, softball, baseball, and other amenities
including walking and jogging paths, game court complexes, picnic
areas, and multiple playgrounds
- Spaces for special events, community family aquatic centers, and
recreation centers
- Service radius of 1.75 miles and near to a high school or business
park
- Organized sport group activities
- Lighted field areas and facilities
- Convenience facilities are provided
- Service various age groups
- A two to three hour experience
Regional Park (200+ acres)
- Large areas for a diverse range of active and passive recreational
activity areas, such as lighted ballfields and field game areas,
organized group activity areas, golf facilities, large family aquatic
facilities, playgrounds, game court complexes, walking and jogging
paths, roller blade and roller hockey facilities, family group picnic
and conversation areas, natural areas for outdoor recreation such as
horseback riding, fishing, camping and hiking paths, sports complexes,
regional recreation centers, and large outdoor festival areas
- Many times regional parks will have a special use facility or single
purpose recreational activity, such as an equestrian facility, golf
course, fairground, outdoor theater, or festival areas
- Designed to avoid adjacent land use impacts and be easily accessible
to the public
- Located within or adjacent to an urban community
- Located in areas of varied topography with diverse environmental
qualities
- Organized sport group facilities
- Emphasize family and organized group activities
- Convenience facilities are provided
- Service a variety of ages
- A full day experience
Special Use Facilities
- Amenities vary for each site and can include both active and passive
activities
- Unique in seasonal events
- Focus on community or regional need
- Parks range in activities offered from being the site of the Chicago
Cubs spring training facility to a botanical garden to potential sites
for natural landscape and passive paths
- Multi-use paths -- Preservation and maintenance of multi-use paths
and open space in Mesa can help provide and enhance additional
recreational opportunities. Path corridors preserve open space.
Preserving linear corridors also creates areas for wildlife and native
vegetation and provides separation for various urban land uses. While
open space is a key quality-of-life factor, a multi-modal path system
serves as a close-to-home recreational area for bicycle and pedestrian
paths. The multi-use paths system is also intended to serve as part of
the regional transportation network. At the present time the City of
Mesa has just two miles of multi-use path in place. The city can reach
a much larger level of multi-use path network by partnering with the
Salt River Project on use of the canals as linear corridors.
- Retention Basins - Retention basins are primarily designed for flood
control. Their secondary use benefits the community by providing open
space throughout the city in close proximity to neighborhoods as open
space. No amenities are designed into the sites but a majority of the
sites are used by the community for youth practice areas.
- Indoor Aquatic Facility - This facility will have a regional to
nationwide impact, and is being designed to Olympic specifications.
- Tennis facilities - Currently Gene Autry Park has the only complex
available to the community for lessons and tournaments. The public
school sites are not maintained to tournament level and access is
restricted to non-school hours.
Neighborhood Recreation Centers
- Specialized indoor recreation facilities
- Summer and after school programs for youth, special interest classes
for teens and adults, holiday programs, and senior programs
- One square foot for each population to be served (Example: a 10,000
square ft. center would serve 10,000 people) - typically 25,000 square
feet
- Service a localized or neighborhood population of various ages with
emphasis on youth
- Centered with safe walking/bike access, located in conjunction with
neighborhood parks and schools
Community Recreation Centers
- Offers a wide range of leisure services, such as fitness programs,
sports programs, craft and hobby activities, indoor gymnasiums, game
rooms, locker and shower facilities, swimming facilities, and
preschool, teen and senior programs
- Multi-generational centers are large recreational facilities that
are usually 55,000 to 100,000 square feet in size. Multi-generational
centers include a large number of program spaces to serve all age
groups. Designated spaces for seniors and teens are included in the
center as well as wellness and fitness spaces, gyms and free weight
areas. Specialized spaces could include exhibit galleries, community
meeting rooms and halls, theaters and cultural activities.
- Serve a variety of neighborhoods and typically are 25,000 square
feet or greater
"
A study of 38 metropolitan areas across the US provided evidence that crime drops when
adequate parks and recreation activities are available
".(Trust for Public
land and the Lila Wallace - Readers Digest Fund) |