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MOA Marjorie Park by Norris Design - Photo Credit: Norris Design
Marjorie Park - a primary venue of the Museum of Outdoor Arts (MOA) in Greenwood Village, Colorado - was created as an exclusive setting for a large portion of museum's diverse, permanent sculpture collection. A recent renovation improved the site as a distinctive cultural experience, performance venue, and gathering space while upgrading the stormwater management system and improving park function through landscape architecture as art. The Denver office of national landscape architecture and planning firm Norris Design was selected for the endeavor. They collaborated closely with the museum, the project's civil engineer S.A Miro, Inc., electrical engineer IMEG, stone masons from Rock and Company, and other subcontractors to develop the primary vision and final concept for the park. Local drainage and stormwater control requirements mandated that the site function as part of a regional system capable of handling 100-year flood elevations. The CanvasSituated in the heart of the Greenwood Village Business Development and just east of the Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre, the existing park consisted primarily of a bluegrass lawn, various sculptures, and a retention pond with permanent standing water, which caused maintenance and safety concerns. The pond once occupied a majority of the site but had deteriorated from years of being inundated with runoff from the drainage basin of the adjacent business development that consisted of pavement and manicured turf. These diminishing conditions produced water quality issues and sediment accumulation in the pond. The prevailing site also had steep slopes leading down to the pond, which was surrounded by a wrought iron safety fence that regularly collected refuse and had become a nuisance for the park. Stormwater Management Careful analysis of flood volumes and water elevations was necessary to identify which portions of the park could be dedicated to stormwater detention and which areas could serve for part-time or permanent passive and recreational use. With these parameters identified, incremental design options began to take shape through a collaborative effort between the owner, engineers, and Landscape Architects, who used 3D renderings and imagery extensively to present detailed concepts to the client and project team throughout the planning phase.
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