Big Marsh Park Will Allow Outdoor Adventures Without the Long Getaway Drive
SOUTH DEERING — The transformation of a former
278-acre industrial site on the Southeast Side into
Big Marsh Bike Park
is well underway — and officials hope by next year it will become a
destination unrivaled in the city for cycling, fishing, canoeing,
hiking, nature-walking and bird-watching.
The park at 110th Street
and Stony Island Avenue in South Deering isn't open to the public yet,
but work on the property has picked up steam as the weather warms.
"There’s still lots of trucks dumping clay at the site, and real construction starts soon, so you can’t just drop in," said
Steve Buchtel,
Friends of Big Marsh program coordinator. "The bike park is going to be
popular. Chicago mountain bikers [go] to Georgia, or Louisville, or
Colorado on weekends to ride the features Big Marsh will have."
Steve
Buchtel, Friends of Big Marsh program coordinator, says Big Marsh Bike
Park is taking shape. The Downtown skyline can be seen in the distant
background. [Photos by DNAinfo/Justin Breen]
The bike park
at Big Marsh is a public-private development, with roughly half the
funding from the Chicago Park District and half from private
contributions, Buchtel said.
Phase 1 of the bike park improvements
will include a combination of different trails and material, according
to Joel Baldin, a project manager with Hitchcock Design. The main plaza
and bike plaza will have concrete sidewalks and a tot track for
beginning riders, Baldin said.
During a tour given to DNAinfo
Chicago on Thursday afternoon, some of the trails were starting to take
shape, but most of the parkland was still unusable.
Last fall, about 100 mountain bikers tried out the trails. Check out the video below:
http://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20150515/south-deering/transformation-of-big-marsh-park-into-biking-mecca-well-underway
The
park's main trail, which will be a half mile, will be multi-use
asphalt, Baldin said. There also will be a crushed gravel multi-use,
1.9-mile path encircling the main bike park area that also will connect
with other areas of the park.
The park also will include multiple
dirt trails, plus BMX-style obstacles like dirt berms, dirt landings, a
curved wall ride, a ladder drop and kicker ramps, Baldin said.
About
1.4 to 2 miles of the trails will be "single track," which are winding
dirt trails around trees and other obstacles like single dirt rollers,
dirt berms, dirt landings, rock gardens and rock causeways, Baldin said.
Buchtel said the bike park will compare favorably to current spots popular with cyclists and mountain bikers:
Palos Hills and
Kettle Moraine State Forest in Wisconsin.
"Palos
and Kettle Moraine have miles and miles of single track trails
maintained by incredible mountain bikers that are fun, challenging, and
of course the landscape is gorgeous," Buchtel said. "Both are fantastic
outdoor experiences. But they’re further away than Big Marsh from most
of the city. Traveling to the trails is usually the least fun part about
mountain biking.
"When you get to Kettle and Palos, what you
don’t find are features professionally designed to appeal to off-road
cyclists and BMX riders — features like jumps and riding walls,
structures for performing tricks, high-banked turns, and obstacles
designed to challenge even a pro’s off-road cycling skills," Buchtel
added.
The cost for opening the first phase of the park in spring
2016 is $6.4 million. The cost includes parking, water and sewer, the
bike park features and a $1 million in-kind donation of dirt, Buchtel
said.
The bike park will be anchored to a 1,000-acre park plan currently known as Big Marsh, Buchtel said.
"[It]
makes Big Marsh the gateway to a major urban park experience on the
southeast side of Chicago, where communities have been too long waiting
and too often fighting for the land around them to be returned to open
space they can enjoy," Buchtel said.
Steve Buchtel, Friends of Big Marsh program coordinator, shows where one of the trails will be at Big Marsh Bike Park.
The first phase was scheduled to be completed this
year but was delayed until 2016 because $900,000 of the project budget
is through an Illinois State OSLAD grant, which was suspended by Gov.
Bruce Rauner on March 9, according to Chicago Park District spokeswoman
Zvezdana Kubat.
"This project has been on hold awaiting a decision
from the state on this important funding. If the state funds are not
released, we will redesign the project to meet the lower budget
available," Kubat said.
Kubat said the park district is looking at "a few different maintenance strategies" for the bike park's trails.
Buchtel
has the keys to the park and said people or organizations who want to
request a tour can email him at friends@bigmarsh.org.
Buchtel also
noted Friends of Big Marsh is working to raise an additional $2 million
of the $6.4 million development cost by this fall for phase one.
Contributions can be made
online or by contacting friends@bigmarsh.org.
In addition,
The Bonebell off-road cycling advocacy group is hosting a viewing of the cyclocross movie “For the Love of Mud“ as a
fundraiser for the Phase 1 buildout of Big Marsh Bike Park. The event is May 31 at 7 p.m. at the Logan Theatre, 2646 N. Milwaukee Ave.