Date: Fri 05-Jun-1998
Date: Fri 05-Jun-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
Amaral-Property-Park-Rec
Full Text:
Amaral Property Transferred To Park & Rec
BY STEVE BIGHAM
The Board of Selectmen voted unanimously Monday to officially turn over the
former Amaral property on Elm Drive to the Parks & Recreation Commission.
The 13-acre parcel, purchased by the town last year, is expected to be used
for both ballfields and passive recreation.
A year ago this week, the Legislative Council voted in favor of purchasing the
$400,000 property with the remaining Iroquois Land Preservation and
Enhancement (LPEP) money.
The Parks & Recreation Commission plans to hire a landscape architect to
determine the best use of the land, according to chairman Larry Haskel. The
likely use will be a multi-purpose baseball/softball field and/or a special
soccer/lacrosse field.
"We won't build any fields this year, but we need to start planning," Parks &
Recreation Director Barbara Kasbarian told the selectmen.
It costs about $100,000 to build a ballfield, according to Mr Haskel.
The P&R Commission also plans to create hiking trails on the remaining open
space. Officials from the Iroquois Gas Transmission System funded the purchase
only on the condition that half the land be used for passive recreation.
The former Amaral property extends in a triangular shape in a northerly
direction from Dickinson Park to the point where Elm Drive and Deep Brook Road
intersect at the Village Cemetery. The lot lies just north of the Dickinson
Park tennis courts.
The property links the open spaces of the park and The Ram Pasture, owned by
the Village Cemetery Association, giving Newtown a band of parkland in the
center of town, extending from Brushy Hill and Point O' Rocks roads to the
foot of Main Street and its intersection with Route 302.
The Parks & Recreation Department recently took down several trees that had
once served as a natural buffer between the former Amaral property and the
Dickinson Park tennis courts. Several of the trees had fallen during storms
and the department felt those still remaining might cause a safety hazard. New
trees and shrubs are expected to be planted to fill in the empty spots.
There are about 25 ball fields in Newtown that are available for town use,
according to Mrs Kasbarian. However, most of the fields are on school
property, often causing scheduling problems.