71°
forecast

Navy site in Virginia Beach destined to be new city park

Posted to: News Virginia Beach

VIRGINIA BEACH

On the southernmost edge of the aptly named Marshview property is Virginia Beach as nature intended.

A tributary to Lake Rudee is filled with salt marsh grass. An egret stands on station, a kingfisher and a blue heron fly overhead.

The 82 acres is owned by the Navy, but - after 17 years of stop-and-start negotiations - it's being conveyed to Virginia Beach to become a park. Its offerings will be comparable to First Landing State Park, city officials said.

"We have lots of areas that offer one or two amenities," said Shawn Hopson, a recreation specialist for the city's Parks and Recreation department. "What you're going to get out of this is all in one location."

The park would center on a network of multiuse paths - trespassers who use the property for all-terrain vehicles have already blazed trails. A relatively small active-use area could hold picnic shelters, playgrounds, dog parks. The balance of the site, city officials said, is suitable for trails and fishing piers. A couple of overlooks are planned next to the marsh.

The Marshview property is bordered by Birdneck Road and the Salt Marsh Point neighborhood to the west; Norfolk Avenue to the north; the Shadowlawn community to the east and Owls Creek/Lake Rudee to the south. It abuts the 5-acre, city-owned Seatack Park to the southwest.

It was set to become an expansion of the Salt Marsh Point development in the 1980s - space for streets had been cleared, a storm water drainage ditch dug - when the Navy intervened. It bought the property to prevent further encroachment on Oceana Naval Air Station.

Navy jets make their last bank here before their landing approach at Oceana. When they fly over, they fly over in groups of three or four.

The Beach first expressed an interest in Marshview in 1991. Turnovers in Navy command repeatedly slowed the process, parks planner Brian Solis said. One commander would sign off, then another would assume the post and the process would start over.

At the dawn of this decade, acquisition got as far as public forums and the drafting of a lengthy city report.

City Council has agreed to the terms of an exchange. The city will provide the Navy with an easement on 46 acres along the Indian River Road corridor and agree to use the park mostly for passive recreation - no lighted baseball fields or tennis courts, no golf courses, no campgrounds, no marinas, no borrow pit or dredge operations station.

The Navy will transfer the deed to the city within the next two weeks, said Navy public affairs officer Kelley Stirling.

"The conveyance of the Marshview property is a win-win for both the Navy and the city of Virginia Beach," Stirling said.

Solis said it likely will be at least five years before park development begins, following a fresh wave of community input.

John Warren, (757) 222-5114, john.warren@pilotonline.com

COMMENTS ADVISORY: Users are solely responsible for opinions they post here; comments do not reflect the views of The Virginian-Pilot or its websites. Users must follow agreed-upon rules: Be civil, be clean, be on topic; don't attack private individuals, other users or classes of people. Read the full rules here.
- Comments are automatically checked for inappropriate language, but readers might find some comments offensive or inaccurate. If you believe a comment violates our rules, click the report violation link below it.

what?

Never be suprised when a pilot hits an unintended target. If this is where they are supposed to bank, they often miss it by a large margin. You can watch then bank all day as far north as Old Beach. In fact, I watched them bank for years a handful of blocks off of the ocean. That is nowhere near this marsh. I was always under the impression this area had been bought due to it's potential as a crach zone. If it was intended as a site to bank over someone wasted some money.

hope you don't live in the area

The "eco" shed includes drain pipes that run from Shadow Lawn into the inlet the contaminate the water with leaves/grass/fertilizer/dog cr_p, you name it..... Maybe you should do another bong hit and figure out how your going to tackle that issue and stop worrying about someone washing their boat....this inlet would not exist if it wasn't for the boaters and the dredging that has been done over the years to keep it open for navigation.....but you would probably rather have a stagnent cess pool so that the rats/bugs and birds my all flourish....I'm sure the residents of Rudee Inlet would love that....

Nice Start, Continue to Conclusion Throughout the Watershed

The entire Rudee Inlet system should be protected from all elaborate development schemes. The Navy, being a premere protector and enhancer of natural resources, thoughfully passed the land to the CoVB for beneficial uses by its citizens and visitors. This offers an opportunity for the City to partner with learning centers to establish an education center focusing on the problems of inappropriate coastal development-what works and what will never work-regardless of the whining and insistance of developers. The property to the south of this land should be acquired and brought into the project to further protect this system from development into a paid (currently free) boat ramp, marina and other unnecessary intrusions. At the head of the Rudee Inlet system, the only suitable use for the Loop properties is the establishment of the First Street Recreation and Surf Park. Other protections must include the prohibition of cleaning boat hulls in the water at the Fishing Center and other moorings releasing poisons/toxic metals to the Rudee.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Please note: Threaded comments work best if you view the oldest comments first.

More articles from: News rss feed   



Toolbox