Dayton dog park gets ready for big move

Park at Deeds Point will close; new, larger park will open farther north at Triangle Park
A dog at Deeds Point Dog Park. CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF

A dog at Deeds Point Dog Park. CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF

Greater downtown Dayton’s only dog park will be moving about a mile and a half north to a new larger property in Triangle Park in late spring.

Deeds Point Dog Park will shut down in coming months after operating for about a decade at a site located north of the Mad River and RiverScape MetroPark.

Dogs at play at Deeds Point Dog Park. CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF

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A new dog park will be installed along the east side of Ridge Avenue, near Jim Nichols Tennis Center and Howell Field.

Dayton City Commission this month approved a $400,000 contract with Outdoor Enterprise Inc. to handle the work.

The project is expected to begin in mid-April and wrap up by late May, according to memo to the city manager from Fred Stovall, Dayton’s director of public works.

“We hope to have this done by June 1,” Stovall told city commissioners at their most recent weekly meeting.

Deeds Point Dog Park is located north of the Mad River,  across from RiverScape and the Water Street District.

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The new dog park will be about four acres. The existing park is about 2.8 acres.

The new park will have a walking path, water fountains, restrooms and shelter enhancements, Stovall said.

The new park will have fenced-in areas for large dogs (3.36 acres in size) and smaller dogs (0.65 acres).

The current park is one large space.

Dogs at play at Deeds Point Dog Park. CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF

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Dayton City Manager Shelley Dickstein said city is contributing $100,000 to the project.

The rest of the funding comes from the Connor Group, which bought land from the city in the Deeds Point area to build a new school.

Excavation and wood pole installation is expected to begin in April, and concrete work, water service installation and enclosing the shelter should start the following month.

Fencing and railing is expected to go in starting in mid-May, and other work includes restoration and seeding and light fixture installation.

Dogs near the entry gate at Deeds Point Dog Park. CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF

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Some dog owners say they will miss the existing dog park because it is at a convenient location and has many great features.

However, some regulars say the new park has some promising new elements that dog owners and their furry companions may enjoy.

“We would like for it to be a bigger and better dog park, like we’ve been promised,” Butch Richardson, president of the Friends of Deeds Point Dog Park, told this newspaper last year.

Plans for the new dog park at Triangle Park. CONTRIBUTED

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