Boosters estimate it will draw as many as 100,000 visitors a year. It will “include (a) multimedia display, water features, concrete amphitheater seating and performance and exhibit space,” reads the application. Ogden Arts Plaza: The plaza has an overall estimated price tag of $3 million, according to the application for funding, with additional funding expected to come from public and private sources and foundations. Work should start this summer, but many specifics of the time line and what gets developed first have to be sorted out. “There’s nothing else like it in the county.” “We want to preserve what’s there, the wilderness that’s there,” Bolos said. Two parking areas are envisioned at the southern end of the park, per a rendering of the facility. West Haven will match the $450,000 grant with around $500,000 of city money, according to Bolos, and plans call for development of a network of paths in the land and small clearings for camping. Around 30 acres of the land was donated from the developer of an adjacent piece of land that’s to be turned into a subdivision containing around 200 units, including homes and town homes. Prevedal Park: The park is to be developed on 86.7 acres, most of that in West Haven but a portion in Marriott-Slaterville. Here are more details of the four projects getting “majors” funding: Everyone benefits from this,” said Commissioner Scott Jenkins, alluding to the range of projects that have received RAMP money. “It’s a blessing to the smaller communities as well as the larger communities. The RAMP tax has generated $42.81 million in all for projects since its inception, according to Bosgieter. Another $340,000 in RAMP funding has yet to be allocated. As part of Tuesday’s action, based on RAMP Tax Advisory Board recommendations, commissioners also approved $1.24 million in funding for 50 other arts and museums projects and $1.19 million for 17 additional parks and recreation projects. The Prevedel Park, arts plaza, Pioneer Stadium and Austad Auditorium projects, known as “majors” because of the amount of RAMP funds each received, garnered $1.45 million between them. The RAMP tax, collected since the mid-2000s, generated $4.2 million in all for 2020 for recreation, arts and related projects, according to Maresha Bosgieter, a member of the RAMP Tax Advisory Board.
West haven park recreation install#
$200,000 to help install a new audio system in Austad Auditorium in Weber State University’s Browning Center for the Performing Arts. More specifically, the money is to be used to help install new seating in the south grandstands and connect the south and east seating areas with a “safety bridge.” $324,241 for further development of Ogden Pioneer Stadium, home to the annual Ogden Pioneer Days Rodeo. $450,000 for the Ogden Arts Plaza, a plaza to be developed at the site of the former Courtyard Motel in the 400 block of 25th Street, west of the Monarch building and part of Ogden’s Nine Rails Creative District. Weber County commissioners on Tuesday also approved large earmarks for three other projects, boding for continued enhancement of the county’s arts and recreational offerings: The park plans aren’t the only projects in line for a big injection of funding from the RAMP tax, meant for recreation, arts, museums and parks development. West Haven is the fastest-growing city in the county and the pace of development has been a heated and ongoing point of discussion, with many lamenting what they say is the loss of the area’s country feel. “It’s going to be the kind of park that people come visit and feel that they’re in that part of the county that they feel they’re losing,” she said. Weber County Commissioners on Tuesday, March 3, 2020, earmarked $480,000 for the project. A rendering of Prevedel Park in West Haven, as it’s tentatively known.