GREATER DES MOINES WATER TRAILS Engineering Study May 21, 2018
Variety of User Experiences
150 miles of creeks and rivers Adopted November 2016
Master Plan dmampo.org/water-trails/
ENGINEERING STUDY
Thank you to the funders Leadership Circle of the Greater Des Moines Community Foundation $205,000 Area jurisdictions $196,000 Includes: Altoona, Ankeny, Bondurant, Carlisle, Clive, Des Moines, Grimes, Johnston, Mitchellville, Norwalk, Pleasant Hill, Urbandale, Waukee, West Des Moines, Windsor Heights, Polk County, Van Meter, and Warren County Greater Des Moines Convention and Visitors Bureau $30,000 Greater Des Moines Partnership $30,000 Polk County Conservation $30,000 Des Moines Area Association of REALTORS $16,500
Water Trails Engineering Study Regional Projects Downtown Dams
REGIONAL STUDY
CREEK BEAVER CREEK TOTAL: $2.3 million DES MOINES RIVER TOTAL: $2.8 million FOURMILE CREEK TOTAL: $1.3 million MIDDLE RIVER TOTAL: $200,000 MUD CREEK TOTAL: $34,000 NORTH RIVER TOTAL: $66,000 RACCOON RIVER TOTAL: $2.8 million SKUNK RIVER TOTAL: $256,000 WALNUT CREEK TOTAL: $1.3 million GRAND TOTAL: $11 million
DOWNTOWN STUDY
Fleur Drive Dam > Learn and Play Woodland Gray s Station Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Levee Parking Drop Off Portage Bypass Down Stream Raccoon River Portage Island In-River Drop 2 Berm Up Stream Drop 1 Gray s Lake
Fleur Drive Dam > Learn and Play Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study RDG Fleur Drive Perspective drawing
Fleur Drive Dam > Learn and Play Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Access
Fleur Dam > Preliminary Comparative Budgets Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Comparative Budget (2018 dollars) In-River Improvements $25 million Upland Amenities $2.8 million $3.1 million Total $27.8 million $28.1 million* Notable variables Lighting and power Landscaping Furnishing Signage and wayfinding * Moving downstream to alternative site shaves about $2 million by eliminating need for additional parking, access street and levee work.
Scott Avenue Dam > The Nature Connection Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Levee Fish Bypass Up Stream Portage Drop 1 In-River Island Drop 2 Fish Habitat Down Stream Portage Fish Habitat Parking Woodland
Scott Avenue Dam > The Nature Connection Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study RDG Fleur Drive Perspective drawing
Scott Avenue > Preliminary Comparative Budgets Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Improvements In-River Improvements Upland Amenities Total Comparative Budget $16.5 million $3.3 million - $5 million $19.8 million - $21.5 million Notable variables Signage Landscaping Lighting and power
Center St I-235 Center Street Dam > A High Energy Adventure Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Armory Women of Achievement Bridge Des Moines River Skatepark 2 nd Ave. Iowa Event Center Wells Fargo Arena
2 nd Ave Center Street Dam > A High Energy Adventure Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study I-235 School St Quality Inn Drop 1 Skatepark Drop 2 Fish Bypass Center St Iowa Event Center Women of Achievement Bridge Drop 3 Drop 4 2 nd Ave.
2 nd Ave Center Street Dam > A High Energy Adventure Parking I-235 Portage Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study School St Quality Inn High Adventure Calm Water The Canyon Drop 1 The Lawn Skatepark Drop 2 Fish Bypass Portage Center St Iowa Event Center Active Water Asian Gardens
2 nd Ave Center Street Dam > A High Energy Adventure Parking I-235 Portage Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Levee School St Quality Inn High Adventure Calm Water The Canyon Drop 1 The Lawn Skatepark Portage Drop 2 Fish Bypass Center St Iowa Event Center Active Water
2 nd Ave Center Street Dam > A High Energy Adventure Center St Skatepark Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Levee Active Water Fish Bypass Portage Iowa Event Center Drop 3 The Lawn Park St. Drop 4 Portage Calm Water
Center Street Dam > A High Energy Adventure Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study
Center Street > Preliminary Comparative Budgets Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Comparative Budget (2018 dollars) In-River Improvements $34.5 million Upland Amenities $5.5 million $22 million Total $40 million $56.5 million Notable variables Lighting and power sourcing Landscaping Adjacent streets improvements Concession building Sidewalks Play structure Interactive fountain Zipline Bouldering course Skatepark Furnishings Signage and wayfinding
Downtown Projects Combined > Preliminary Comparative Budgets Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study Comparative Budget (2018 dollars) In-River Improvements $76 million Upland Amenities $11.6 million $30.1 million Total $87.6 million $106.1 million
Total Combined Costs Comparative Budget (2018 dollars) * In-River Improvements Upland Amenities Regional Projects Total $76 million $11.6 million $30.1 million $11 million $98.6 million $117.1 million * Does NOT include funding for a maintenance endowment.
In-River Improvements > Cost-Comparison Matrix Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study
In-River Improvements > Cost-Comparison Matrix Downtown Des Moines Water Trails Engineering Study
Have you thought about FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
What about water quality? Water quality is a multi-faceted problem requiring range of solutions. Water Trails is an important component. Water trails complement the plans and projects of Watershed Management Authorities Water trails projects include water-quality improvements Proposed: Real-time water quality monitoring and reporting
What about water quality? Water quality is a multi-faceted problem requiring range of solutions. Water Trails is an important component. By inviting more people to the river, build generations of stewardship of the water. By tying economic development to water quality, increase pressure to improve water quality.
When will construction start? Like the paved trail network, this is something that will be built out over many years. Some regional projects are starting as early as this year Once funded, downtown projects are multi-year projects Estimated 2 years of regulatory permitting and compliance
How will we pay for it? This will have to a public-private partnership with many sources of revenue. Study is identifying state, federal, private grant opportunities Local governments capital improvement plans Private fundraising
NEXT STEPS
Final public meetings Thursday, June 21, at Register Community Room Noon 1:30 p.m. 5 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
Funding Feasibility Study Great Outdoors Foundation developing the study Timeline: Summer Fall 2018 Goals: Develop understanding of funding options at local, state and federal levels Measure willingness and capacity for private gifts Economic Impact Study Summer 2018
QUESTIONS?