Murfreesboro Parks and Recreation Department (MPRD) will host a ribbon-cutting ceremony to officially open its Stream Restoration and Water Quality Enhancement project in Old Fort Park Sept. 22 at 2 p.m., an official announced.
“This renovation project has not only created significant park improvements and environmental benefits,” MPRD Assistant Director Angela Jackson said, “but it also serves as a demonstration of water quality tools needed for storm water management.
Design elements of the project address bio-retention and the problem of storm water infiltration as well as stream and meadow restoration with native plants to provide wildlife habitat and increase biodiversity, she explained.
The City of Murfreesboro dedicated Old Fort Park on Oct. 29, 1977, she said. The city had purchased the original property, the Bills Farm, in 1965. With cooperative efforts among the City of Murfreesboro, Rutherford County and the Stones River National Battlefield, Old Fort Park soon became a significant attraction in Murfreesboro.
Murfreesboro Water and Sewer Department Storm Water Manager and Engineer Robert Haley was instrumentally involved in the process, Jackson said.
“This project’s educational components and potential for future collaboration and partnerships have been extended in a variety of ways,” Jackson said. “Through on-site interpretive signage, printed brochures and web references to storm water management guidelines, educational opportunities can be self-guided; however, the site is also very conducive to workshops, programs and other events.