Sports complex to open doors
- Share via
Jenny Marder
Just a little bit longer.
That always seems to be the answer to when the long-awaited
$18-million sports complex will open.
Now, city leaders say that grand opening will be next month. But
after the fanfare dies down, only a fraction of the park will be
ready for play.
The Youth Sports Complex, which was expected to open last fall,
has suffered repeated delays.
Softballs will start flying this spring, but the seven overlaying
football and soccer fields won’t be ready for use until the fall -- a
full year after they were scheduled to open.
To withstand heavy wear and tear, grass turf on the football and
soccer fields still need six more months to settle into the soil,
Community Services Director Jim Engle said.
“[The delay] is because of the need to extend the maintenance
period to allow the turf to really establish itself,” Engle said. “If
we don’t have a good root system, the athletes will tear it up, and
we won’t have the downtime to fix it again.”
Postponing the opening date has been frustrating but is better
than the alternative, said David Dominguez, director of facilities
and development.
“The worst thing we could do is to open up early and have to shut
it down again, for damage,” he said. “It’s also kind of nerve racking
because it’s so highly anticipated. I hope that people will walk in
and get that big-bang effect that we’re hoping for.”
The complex is a 45-acre parcel bounded by Goldenwest Street,
Gothard Street, Ellis Avenue and Talbert Avenue. The center will
include seven softball fields with seven overlaying fields for soccer
or football, an 850-space parking lot, two tot lots, two restrooms,
two concession stands and a maintenance building.
The second phase, which has been indefinitely postponed, will
include two artificial turf soccer arenas, two plastic-tile roller
hockey rinks, a nine-station batting cage and a pro shop.
Engle also attributed the delay to “incorrect information from the
landscape architect on how long it would take for everything to
establish itself.”
The city originally planned on hydro-seeding the fields, which
would have been much faster than the chosen method, but wouldn’t have
held up to the wear and tear, Engle said. Instead, they planted
hydro-stolons, or small clumps of grass, which take longer to grow
and establish themselves.
“[Hydro-stolons] are recommended to hold up in the beach weather
and the sports field,” Engle said.
Setbacks aside, Engle is positive that the sports complex will be
a welcome addition to the city.
“It’s one of those projects that the community’s worked on for
over a decade to come to fruition,” he said. “It’s something that a
city our size should have had years ago.”
Ed Kerins, president of activist group Huntington Beach Tomorrow,
has mixed feelings about the complex.
“It’s going to cost us a fortune to provide this facility,” Kerins
said. “But it’s a needed facility and good for the residents of the
city.”
Kerins applauded the city’s attempt to make room for youth sports
at the community center fields by moving adult teams into the
complex.
“Look at the community centers,” Kerins said. “Adult sports have
taken up fields in the community centers.”
The new complex will serve adult leagues, such as adult softball
teams. The fields the teams now use, at Edison High School and Murdy
Park Community Center, will be reserved for more youth-oriented
sports.
“It’s part of the overall plan to introduce the youth needs of the
community,” Engle said.
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.