| (This article reprinted courtesy of the
National Center
on Accessibility) This quickly growing township
on the northeast edge of Grand Rapids saw a need at
Versluis Park and responded to the challenge. Tired
of observing patrons who were unable to engage in
beach and water activities because of varying
abilities, they decided to do something about it.
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| A Versluis Park goal is to
become fully accessible. |
To achieve their goal of a fully accessible park,
the necessary funds were secured through a Michigan
Natural Resources Trust Fund grant, with 50% local
match. The Township then hired two consultants:
Progressive AE for site design and engineering
services and Cindy Burkhour, an inclusive recreation
consultant with Access Recreation Group for
accessibility expertise. A three-way partnership was
formed to creatively eliminate obstacles to
universal enjoyment of this lakefront area.
"This was truly a team effort, with our client
providing the vision, Cindy contributing insight
into recreation accessibility-above and beyond ADA
compliance, and Progressive solving the design
challenges," stated Greg Scott, project designer for
Progressive.
Versluis Park comprises playground areas, picnic
facilities, beach and swimming areas with lifeguard
stations and a bathhouse, fishing, boating, and two
miles of paved walking trails. Rather than creating
"separate but equal" facilities, the design team
wanted to provide recreational opportunities for
people who are physically challenged by integrating
them into the fabric of the park.
Their solution included:
- Beach access consisting of a deck, transfer
step/backrest, shade trellis and seating
- Lake access from a wheelchair ramp and
transfer-step system down to the water
- Water-side viewing via a 300' boardwalk with
railing design that is sensitive to user
sight-lines
- Fishing access from a floating pier that has
seating and wheelchair accessible fishing
stations
The park borders a 50-acre manmade lake that evolved
from a sand and gravel mining operation. The lake is
separated from a large river by a tiny sliver of
land. The lake level rises and falls with the level
of the Grand River--a seasonal fluctuation of
approximately 7 feet. Because the park is in a
floodplain, the parking lot and restroom facilities
are on high ground that can be up to 14' higher than
the water elevation in some instances.
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| Versluis Park grade
transitions. |
The design goal was to make the grade transitions
seem like a logical progression of travel, rather
than a forced set of switchback ramps. This was
accomplished by grade transitions of considerable
length that lead to landings with intermediate
activities. These spacious landings act as resting
spots or spring points to multiple destinations.
Due to lake level fluctuation, maintaining
universal access to each recreational component,
regardless of the prevailing conditions, posed an
engineering challenge. The lake access transfer step
system needed more than one entry point to
accommodate both very high and very low lake level
conditions. This was accomplished by the inclusion
of an adjacent wheelchair ramp, which could bring a
patron down to a halfway entry point in low water
conditions in addition to serving its primary
function of water access.
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| Versluis Park wheelchair
ramp. |
A poured-in-place slip-resistant rubber surface on
the ramp, galvanized metal railings and colored
accent bands on the edge of the transfer steps all
help to guide or assist users into the water whether
the surfaces are above or below the lake water. The
adjacent beach access deck, transfer steps, and
wheelchair ramp are all within the heart of the
park. Bench seating and a shade trellis are used to
draw all park visitors to this area of the beach,
successfully integrating people of all abilities.
"Our intent was to create a gathering spot where all
visitors could interact--this has been successful
beyond our expectations. The steps and ramp are also
used as a shallow water play area by young children
while their parents watch under the comfort of the
shade trellis. It has become a real focal point of
activity for the beachfront", said Greg Scott.
The fishing pier is a floating facility that
rises and falls with the lake level. The engineering
design was complicated by the extreme grade drop
from the boardwalk to the end of the fishing pier in
low water conditions. To maintain universal
accessibility, it was necessary to have a landing
after 30" of grade drop before another ramp
continued down to the fishing portion of the pier.
The solution was a landing that "locks in" at the
necessary elevation by means of legs and spread feet
that rest on the lake bottom. The legs are
adjustable so the landing may be raised in extreme
high water conditions.
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| Versluis Park fishing pier. |
The pier takes advantage of excellent fishing due to
several years of stocking fish by the Michigan
Department of Natural Resources. It includes four
accessible fishing stations that have low railings
with the capability to secure fishing rod handles.
Fish retrieval openings and small bench seats are
adjacent to wheelchair accessible areas, letting all
devoted fishermen entertain each other with their
favorite fishing stories.
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| Versluis Park inclusive
design. |
While other Michigan parks have begun paying
attention to inclusive design, it was John Short's
intent to fully embrace the spirit of the law (ADA
compliance). "If you're going to build new, why not
be inclusive 100%?" John further noted that these
facilities are used extensively every day during the
summer months, "We have a gentleman who comes on a
daily basis, transfers into the water via the steps
and swims laps in the swim area". Whether it is an
individual or one of the many groups from area
schools, all can find recreation opportunities that
previously were not available to them.
Cindy Burkhour considers the Versluis park
waterfront a leading example of what creativity,
commitment and thinking outside of the box can
accomplish. "I don't know of any [other Michigan
parks] that are as successful in providing access to
these types of facilities."
It is the project team's hope that Versluis Park
will become a model for others, encouraging
communities to make the effort to incorporate
inclusive facilities into their parks. With a little
extra effort and financial commitment, all patrons
can enjoy recreational activities equally.
The National Center on
Accessibility provides technical assistance,
training and research on access to parks, recreation
and tourism. For more information contact NCA at
(812) 856-4422 (voice), (812) 856-4421 (tty), or
www.ncaonline.org
Original Article can be
found here. |