Article Contributed on: 9/24/2007 2:39:58 PM
Red Rocks will be the spectacular setting for an informal open house on Oct. 13, 2007 from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. to celebrate the legacy of Denver Mountain Parks and Jefferson County Open Space. Together, Denver Mountain Parks and Jefferson County Open Space provide more than 60,000 acres of open space parks to the public. Both Denver and Jefferson County want public feedback toward their master plans for park, open space and trail improvements.
Peter Wernick, "Dr. Banjo" of Hot Rize and Flexigrass Band fame, will give a free performance on the Visitor Center Terrace at the Top Circle Lot. Residents from across the Front Range are invited for the music, food, and a chance to offer their thoughts about the parks, open spaces and trails in Jefferson County.
The City and County of Denver began its 14,000-acre, historic mountain park system in 1912 after the public passed a small tax to purchase land and build roads so that all residents could "escape" the city and join tourists in the cool mountains. By 1939, Denver had built the bulk of its system, its iconic stone picnic shelters and parks in three counties: Jefferson, Douglas, and Clear Creek. It built Winter Park Ski Resort, in Grand County, in the 1940s and the Newton Group Picnic areas in the 1970s.
Today, the Denver Mountain Park system stretches from the highest City Park in the U.S., Summit Lake at 12,800 feet on Mt. Evans to Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre, Buffalo Bill Museum and Grave, Evergreen Lake in Dedisse Park and a string of popular picnic parks along Bear Creek. The current Master Plan, partially funded by Great Outdoors Colorado and expected to be completed by the end of the year, intends to take the 1912 vision into the current century, especially for recreation trends, natural resource protection and stable funding.
Jefferson County Open Space began its nationally-known open space system in 1972 with a one-half of one percent sales tax which it supplemented with an acquisition bond authorized by the public in 1998. Its over 50,000 acres of open space range from historic sites such Hiwan Homestead Museum or White Ranch Park to pristine tops of peaks. Known for their extensive multi-use trail system, the popular Jefferson County Open Space parks, like some Denver Mountain Parks, face heavy use.
Jefferson County citizens are known for their strong support of open space conservation and the Open Space division updates their Open Space Master Plan every five years. The information and input at the Red Rocks Open House in October will be a kick-off for their current update.
Jefferson County Open Space and Denver Mountain Parks together provide a regional system of parks and open spaces for people, wildlife, and water without regard to boundaries. The two counties work together for the preservation of these open spaces, such as the recently completed trailhead at Windy Saddle Park, that connects people to Denver's historic Beaver Brook Trail.
For information on the two master plans or the October 13 Open House, please contact Susan Baird at Denver Parks and Recreation (720-913-0617) or Thea Rock at Jefferson County Open Space (303-271-5902).
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