Lynnwood parks department unveils data‑driven capital prioritization, lists Pioneer and Rowe projects
Loading...
Summary
Parks Planning Superintendent Monica Thompson presented a 118‑project prioritization list built on equity and project‑level scoring and identified near‑term council actions including Pioneer Park renovations, Rowe Park design, and grant application authorizations.
Monica Thompson, Lynnwood’s park planning superintendent, briefed the council on April 15 about a data‑driven capital program built from a 118‑project inventory and a new prioritization tool aimed at directing limited capital funds toward equitable, resilient and high‑impact projects.
Thompson said the tool combines a park equity screening (five equally weighted maps using 2020 census blocks, amenity counts, racial and social equity metrics, health‑sensitive population data and heat‑island severity) with a project‑level evaluation (ADA barrier removal, operational criticality and other criteria). The combined ranking produces 10‑year, six‑year and two‑year project lists to guide biennium budgeting and grant readiness.
She outlined potential near‑term council action items: a $500,000 set‑aside for Pioneer Park renovation (accessible route, trail widening, playground replacement and drainage work); a Rowe Park development estimate with up to $4,000,000 maximum project cost and a potential $500,000 state grant ask for development; and a City Center Park (Town Square) acquisition reimbursement ask tied to an $8,000,000 purchase and future development planning.
Councilors pressed for environmental assessments, arborist reports and geotechnical studies tied to major projects; Thompson said those studies occur during the preliminary work and that parks generally prioritize saving trees where feasible. She also explained that some projects are phased and that implementation timelines typically range from about three years at the fast end to five–eight years for larger projects.
