More parking, playing fields approved for Murdy Park
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Young athletes can look forward to playing ball in
a new multi-field youth sports complex, part of a joint effort between
the city and the Ocean View School District.
The City Council approved a master plan agreement Sept. 5 with the
district to expand parking and playing fields at Murdy Community Park.
The project calls for six new baseball diamonds at adjoining Park View
School, nearly 100 parking spaces and more restrooms.
“I think it’s a win-win situation for everyone involved,” said James
Tarwater, Ocean View’s superintendent. “The adults don’t use our fields,
and the school district has always been supportive of youth activities.”
Park View hasn’t served elementary students for 10 years, he added.
Instead, the school is leased to the Huntington Beach Union High School
District for adult education classes, leaving its fields open for other
uses.
The six new playing fields, to be used by the public and the Ocean
View Little League during baseball season, include two minor and one
major league diamonds, as well as fields for the league’s farm,
challenger and T-ball teams.
Removable fences would enclose the diamonds during the baseball
season, and they would be taken out to make way for soccer, football and
other sports at other times, school officials said.
“Murdy is the first of five community parks that we plan on orienting
toward youth sports,” said Ron Hagan, the city’s director of community
services. “There will be a complex for adults at Central Park, and having
youth complexes in neighborhood parks will meet the facility needs while
cutting down on traffic and other disturbances in those neighborhoods.”
An inventory and study of the city’s community sports facilities in
1997 recommended the development of a multiuse youth sports complex, city
officials said. The project has been in the works for the last year, they
added.
“This plan stems from the district’s plan to use its Crest View and
Rancho View school sites for commercial purposes,” Hagan said, adding
that when the schools were built, they were joined to parks to maximize
field usage. “The school’s efforts here mitigate the loss of the fields
attached to those schools.”
Murdy Park already features two lighted baseball diamonds, lighted
basketball and tennis courts, fields for soccer and football, and a
community center. The park also has restrooms, a community building and
picnic facilities.
When complete, the city’s youth sporting needs should be met for the
next 25 years, city officials said, adding that they expect the project
to be finished by 2002.
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