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Big Changes for Ortega Park

City envisions new pools, waterslide, skate park, artificial turf, and fence.

Big Changes for Ortega Park
What Ortega Park 2.0 might look like

It’s far more than a face-lift that’s now in the works for the Eastside’s Ortega Park; it’s a total transformation. How much it will all cost and how it will be paid for remain multimillion-dollar questions. But for right now, City Parks czar Jill Zachary and her lieutenant Rich Hanna have just secured support from the City Council to dream very big dreams for the intensely used but troubled park.

To flesh out those dreams, the council gave Zachary the green light to spend $410,000; of that, $270,000 will come from the general fund and will pay the design costs. Among the key components will be a new multipurpose field made out of artificial turf; natural turf fields, the council heard, have to lie fallow four months out of every 12 just to recuperate to a safe playing state. Replacing the small pool now on the site will be a much bigger facility that can accommodate lap swimming, aquatics instruction, and a waterslide. The basketball courts will be replaced with new courts, and, in addition, there will be ping-pong tables, bocce courts, and beanbag-toss areas. The other major addition will be a skateboard park, the city’s second. There will be night lights to accommodate nighttime play on the courts and field; there are none now. Considerably more parking would be provided, and the whole park will be fenced.

Driving these plans are a combination of factors: the gentrification of nearby neighborhoods, district elections, but most dramatically, the high number of times city police are called to the park in response to complaints. Last year, there were 435. “Crazy things go on at that park,” Zachary said after Tuesday’s council meeting. “Really crazy things.” For example, the Ortega Park bathrooms featured prominently in a rape trial now taking place. Police are frequently called to deal with the loud, the drunk, and the sometimes intimidating; AMR (American Medical Response) is often called in response to drug overdoses.