THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

An Addition to the Animas

An Addition to the Animas

By Davis Deussen

Author: Bodine, James/Wednesday, April 19, 2017/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

The Durango Whitewater Park is currently undergoing renovations to address some issues that the park has with high river flows.

 

The renovations were scheduled from Feb. 23 to mid-March and some of the work has already been completed, Scott McClain, Parks Manager for the City of Durango said.

 

Higher river flows that are unusual for this early in the season have caused the remainder of the renovations to be pushed back until the river flows lower, meaning that the work should be completed sometime in the fall, McClain said.

 

The park remains open while the renovations are ongoing, McClain said.

 

The City of Durango Parks and Recreation Department headed this project and hired S20 Design and Engineering to come up with the plan for and to build the whitewater park, which completed construction in the winter of 2014, McClain said.

 

The goal behind this project was to turn a few, constantly shifting whitewater structures that had been at this location into a permanent whitewater park by providing differences in degrees of difficulty and different types of waves for rafters, kayakers, playboaters and other river users, McClain said.

 

“The structures that were there before our project were all loose-weight boulders and so at high-water events those boulders would shift and we were having to get back in the river pretty frequently to move rocks back, re-create those structures,” McClain said.

 

The four structures that are now in place, or five with the one that Utilities did, are grouted in place, so the cost of maintenance should be less on those structures, McClain said.

 

The four structures that the Durango Whitewater Park consists of is the Smelter Rapids, Corner Pocket, Ponderosa and Clock Tower, Nathan Werner, a project engineer from S20 Design and Engineering said.

 

A whitewater park had historically been at this location of Smelter Rapids and because of its proximity to Santa Rita Park and its multiple access points to the Animas River, it made logistical sense to create a permanent park to cut down on maintenance costs of having to constantly get in the river with machines to do work, McClain said.

 

The cost of the project was $1.25 million, McClain said.

 

Corner Pocket and Ponderosa are the two structures that are experiencing the renovations to address issues with the flow patterns and wave size occurring in these areas during high flows, Werner said.

 

The fifth structure, which is located upstream of the Durango Whitewater Park, was not affiliated with S20 Design and Engineering, Werner said.

 

This fifth structure is associated with the City of Durango’s Utilities Department, who hired Riverwise Engineering, as a way to get water flow over to an intake system that brings water in for the city’s water system, McClain said.

 

“The main point of that was Utilities, to make sure that especially at low flows, late-summer that they were still getting water as utility where they needed it, but then we worked with them as Parks and Recreation Department to make sure that it worked for the boaters and incorporated some recreation feature into it as well,” McClain said.

 

The renovations that are currently ongoing are a part of the initial planning process as a period of maintenance, due to the uncertainties that come with the designing and building of a river project, Werner said.

 

“Whitewater parks almost always have a maintenance and tuning component that goes into them and this is just some tuning to try to change the characteristics of the waves as the water gets high,” Werner said.

 

Due to different levels of wave intensity, the features in the whitewater park give a variety of training opportunities for river-goers to practice, such as paddling techniques, rolling techniques, understanding river currents, how to get in and out of those river currents and overall river safety, Kat MacDougald, a local kayaker, said.

 

MacDougald said that the whitewater park is a nice addition for people to get out and finesse their techniques in a smaller, community-based area rather than always having to go out to practice on bigger features.

 
Print

Number of views (2911)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

A Community Builds a Bookstore

Tiana Padilla

Maria’s Bookshop celebrates 40 years in Durango

 

People forming a line at the front entrance of Maria’s Bookshop for their 40th anniversary celebration Sept. 19.   Kealey Meyer, a Fort Lewis College student, and a bookseller at Maria’s reading off numbers for one of many book raffles happening throughout the night. Meyer has been going to Maria’s since childhood, she said. “As a college student,...

Vibrant Voices

Kiiyahno Edgewater

The past, present and future of representing diversity on campus.

Nearly half of Fort Lewis Colleges’s student population is Native American and Alaska Native, and students of color make up 59%. With such a large percentage of students with diverse voices from all corners of the world, how does FLC manage to represent every unique voice while maintaining all else?  Vice president of Diversity Affairs, Heather Shotton, came to FLC because of the...

The Hidden Cost

Story by: Matthew Claeson and Zara Tucker

Investigating Meal Swipes and the New Food Provider at Fort Lewis College

Fort Lewis College announced on Apr. 9 that Fresh Ideas will be taking over Fort Lewis College’s food service and dining contract, a place that has been filled by Sodexo for the past 15 years. This article takes a look into Sodexo’s food service system for students.  Skycards and Meal Swipes When it comes to skycards here at Fort Lewis College, they are a student’s...

The Coming Storm

Scout Edmondson

Lessons learned from the ‘22/‘23 winter and what could come with the looming El Niño.

  At the end of the 2023 winter, the San Juan Mountains, just north of Durango saw a record-breaking snowpack.  According to the National Resource Conservation Service, a branch of the US Department of Agriculture that tracks historical snowpack data, the snowpack in The San Juans topped out at 31.5 inches of snow-water equivalent (SWE) in mid-April. Purgatory Ski Resort,...

Crying Wolf

Scout Edmondson

Colorado's wolf reintroduction has become so emotional, so political, that it's no longer even about the wolves. 

Cover photo courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Wolf 2306-OR runs into the wild after being released by CPW on Dec.19, 2023.  Grand County is a land of wide open skies, snowy mountains that hunch against the biting wind blowing off the plains of Wyoming, and miles and miles of prairie, pine forests and meandering trout streams. It’s home to the headwaters of the Colorado...

123468910Last