Showing posts with label valley passage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label valley passage. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Hank Aaron State Trail Run/Walk fundraiser in 3 Bridges Park


The Friends of the Hank Aaron State Trail held its annual fundraising Run/Walk last Saturday. It was well attended, with over 1500 participants. For the first time the route included a leg through Three Bridges Park, from the bridge at 33rd Ct. west to the Valley Passage Bridge. That was the leg I covered and I offer a few samples of the photographs I caught there.


The first of the pack reaches the bridge at 33rd Ct.


Runners strung out along the Trail next to the newly built community garden plots.


Passing the 35th St. Viaduct and a field of coneflowers.


And across the Valley Passage Bridge.

To see more images from the event, go to my flickr set.
(Full disclosure: I am on the board of the Friends of the Hank Aaron State Trail.)

This post is one in a series that relates to my Menomonee Valley Artist in Residency. For more information about the residency and links to previous posts and photographs, go to MV AiR.  

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Snowscapes in the Menomonee Valley



A flock of geese descending towards a small patch of open water on the Menomonee River at the Valley Passage Bridge crossing. I went out during the snowfall on Sunday and caught this. It was beautiful and haunting.

And the Industrial Park across Canal Street from the river was also haunting in its own way. It will come as no surprise to followers of this blog that one of the things I love about the Menomonee Valley is this juxtaposition of urban and wilderness!


Monday, November 8, 2010

Hank Aaron State Trail ribbon cutting today

The sun was bright and the weather balmy today as eager supporters of the Hank Aaron State Trail (HAST) assembled on Pierce Street at 37th to celebrate the opening of the new Valley Passage, a new bridge over the Menomonee River, and a new length of the HAST. I’d call it a three run homer for Hank! Mayor Barrett headlined an all-star cast of dignitaries and celebrities who universally extolled the virtues of a Trail that is now within a fifteen minute bike ride of over 400,000 people in the Milwaukee area.

 People stream down the elegant S-curve of the Valley Passage towards the river.

The Valley Passage and bridge reopens a route from the near south side Silver City neighborhood into the Menomonee Valley, thus providing access to the Valley with its still expanding industries and recreational opportunities. Simultaneously, a new leg of the HAST now reaches from the Valley out to 94th Street along a former rail line. Plans to continue it out to join the Oak Leaf Trail near the county line will make it possible to ride a bicycle from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River.


 Officials and celebrities join in the ribbon cutting at the new bridge.

But wait, there’s more! Another runner rounds third and hits the bag for a fourth run: Ken Leinbach, director of the Urban Ecology Center (UEC) was on hand to officially announce the center’s partnership with the State Trail. The UEC’s third satellite center will be housed in a former bar building right next to the Valley Passage and bring children from south side schools into newly restored riverside parklands. Have I mentioned lately how important the work of the UEC is to Milwaukee’s urban wilderness? I cannot speak more highly of their programs. I hope someday there are satellite centers within a fifteen minute bike ride from everywhere in Milwaukee County.


This doesn’t look like much more than piles of dirt today, but this was once a rail yard and will soon be beautifully restored parkland that evokes Wisconsin’s glacial heritage. The HAST will provide access and the UEC will bring schoolchildren to explore the river and native wildlife there.

Many people were thanked at the ceremony today, including State DNR and Milwaukee officials, politicians, and businesses, among others, who contributed time, energy, materials, and funds to make all of this possible. However, the most important thanks go to trail manager Melissa Cook, the staff of Menomonee Valley Partners, and the Friends of the Hank Aaron State Trail, many of whom are gathered here for their first ride across the new bridge.


Oh, and stay tuned. Here's artist Chad Brady putting final touches on the first section of a new mural that will cover the entire concrete retaining walls of the Valley Passage. The other sections will be finished next spring.

 

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Hank Aaron and Oak Leaf Trails to be extended

Good news for the urban wilderness! Major extensions to both the Hank Aaron State Trail and the Oak Leaf Trail received federal funding to move forward. Read more about it here.

The new Valley Passage bridge across the Menomonee River is nearing completion. It will connect the existing Hank Aaron Trail to the new extension, which will run west to the County Line and connect to the Oak Leaf Trail and beyond!

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Menomonee Valley loses its iconic chimneys

I was there before they came down (above) and I was there again to see the pile of bricks and debris today (below). But my friend Richard was there for the crash. Check his photo essay of the Menomonee Valley chimneys at "The Art of Fine Photography."


The good news, on the other hand, was at the south end of the viaduct, where construction of the new valley passage and Hank Aaron State Trail bridge continues.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Milwaukee's three rivers in today's news

Important current projects on each of Milwaukee's three rivers made today's Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. The Headline reads "Urban river rebirth effort under way."

The specific projects covered in the story are

A) the new Menomonee Valley Passage that will link the Hank Aaron State Trail and the new business park in the Valley with the Silver City neighborhood to the south.

B) the Milwaukee Common Council's scheduled vote on the long awaited overlay district that will protect the Milwaukee River corridor. (see photo below, a view of the Cambridge Woods segment, which is just north of Locust Street.)

C) The planned removal of parts of the concrete channel that is a major reason the Kinnickinnic River has been designated one of the ten most endangered rivers in the US. (pictured above.)

They are all great projects. Read the whole story by clicking here.