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Heritage Award

Submitted by: Spokane Park Board & Spokane Parks & Recreation Department

 
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Photo Courtesy of the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture

 

Heritage Project – 1908 Olmsted Park Plan

A design that has significantly contributed to Spokane’s quality of life. 

The 1908 Spokane “System of Parks and Parkways” by the Olmsted Brothers, Landscape Architects of Brookline, Massachusetts set the foundations for a park system that improves quality of life for everyone in Spokane, regardless of age or economic status.  Implementation of this design was thanks to the foresight of Aubrey L. White, Spokane’s first Park Board President, the Board of Park Commissioners, and the Spokane citizens who passed a one-million dollar bond issue in 1910 by a narrow 18 vote margin for land acquisition.

In addition, it’s important to note the Park Board members and staff who have for the past 99 years continued to honor the Olmsted Report by referring to it for direction; as well as the citizens who use, enjoy, and support our parks system – making it one of Spokane’s most cherished assets.

  1. Upriver Parkway, Manito Boulevard and Rockwood Boulevard were all recommendations of the Olmsted Report.  Other themes of the report that are evident in Spokane's park system today include:

  2. Every home, from humble to grand, should be within easy walking distance of a neighborhood park.  Spokane's parks are evenly spaced from north to south, east to west. 

  3. The more parks the better.  The Olmsteds believed that parks were a necessary and healthy antidote to the stresses of city living.  The report recommended at least 20 new Spokane parks in addition to the 10 already in existence. 

  4. A great deal of parkland should be left natural and undeveloped, especially large parks on the edges of the city.  They noted that "reservations of country scenery" become more and more necessary as cities grow.  Today, Spokane holds large tracts of parkland that are essentially wild, including Palisades Park on the city's western rim rocks, and Hangman Park between High Drive and Latah Creek.  Close proximity of city and nature has become a valuable and defining feature of Spokane; as people are recognizing how desirable and rare it is to have the best of both worlds in one place. 

The benefits of these early visionary plans include Spokane’s public gardens, trails, playfields, parkways and nature corridors.  These places form an exceptional park system that sets our city apart from anyplace else.   

 
 

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Created in May of 2003

Last modified: February 24, 2010 3:56 PM