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Civic Garden Park

Coordinates: 32°46′46″N 96°48′09″W / 32.779547°N 96.802438°W / 32.779547; -96.802438
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(Redirected from Belo Garden Park)
Civic Garden
Map
TypePublic
LocationDallas, Texas
Coordinates32°46′46″N 96°48′09″W / 32.779547°N 96.802438°W / 32.779547; -96.802438
Area1.7-acre (6,900 m2)
Operated byCity of Dallas
StatusOpen all year
WebsiteCivic Garden

Civic Garden (formerly Belo Garden Park) is a 1.7-acre (0.69 ha) public park located in downtown Dallas, Texas, United States. The park is located between Main and Commerce, east of Griffin in the Main Street District. The park, formerly a parking lot, features perennial gardens, shaded groves, plaza spaces, an interactive fountain, a 10’ high hill which provides topographical relief and views over the central fountain plaza, and a shaded garden grove with movable tables and chairs.[1][2] In 2006 Belo Corporation (the owners of Dallas-area ABC affiliate WFAA and The Dallas Morning News) committed $6.5 million toward the $14.5 million construction of the park. The park was created to honor the employees of A. H. Belo Corporation and Belo Corp., past, present and future. It is one of several new downtown parks planned and construction in downtown Dallas between 2000 and 2020.

Although scheduled for groundbreaking in 2008 the timeline was delayed due to the discovery of contaminated soil.[3] Soil removal began in July 2010, and the park was rescheduled to open in early 2012.[4] During development Civic Garden's design was the center of local controversy. A 12-foot wall separating the park from the adjacent Metropolitan Building was included for reasons including traffic protection and noise isolation. Professionals called this feature unneeded and anti-urban, but a resolution with Belo was not reached.[5]

In June 2021 the name of the park was changed to Civic Garden in response to A.H. Belo Corporation changing its name to DallasNews Corporation.[6]

Shooting

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On July 7, 2016, Civic Garden became the scene of a mass shooting targeting police officers. Five officers were killed and eight others injured by sniper fire.[7][8] It is the deadliest attack on U.S. law enforcement since the September 11 attacks.[9]

References

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  1. ^ "Hargreaves Associates - Hargreaves Associates Belo Garden". Archived from the original on 2013-01-03.
  2. ^ "Belo Garden - The Westin Dallas Downtown". Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide.
  3. ^ Wilonsky, Robert (17 September 2009). "Before Belo Garden, Soil Remediation".
  4. ^ "Site work to start on 1.6-acre Belo Garden in downtown Dallas".
  5. ^ Grimes, Andrea (11 February 2011). "Is Belo Building"Wall Of Spite" Between the Downtown Garden and Metropolitan Condos?".
  6. ^ "Downtown Dallas Park is Renamed Civic Garden". 17 June 2021.
  7. ^ "At Least Four Police Officers Killed in Dallas". The Atlantic. July 7, 2016. Retrieved July 7, 2016.
  8. ^ Carissimo, Justin; Garcia, Feliks; Osborne, Samuel (July 7, 2016). "Five police officers killed and seven wounded by snipers at police brutality protest in Dallas". The Independent. Retrieved July 8, 2016.
  9. ^ "5 Police Officers Killed in Downtown Dallas Ambush". NBC San Diego. July 8, 2016. Retrieved July 8, 2016.
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