Riverside Park (Buffalo, New York)

Riverside Park is a historic park located in the Riverside neighborhood in Buffalo, New York. Located in northwest Buffalo, it is an individual park designed by the Olmsted Architectural Firm in 1898 after Frederick Law Olmsted's retirement. It is on a 22-acre (8.9 ha) site on a bluff overlooking the Niagara River. Riverside Park was designed for active recreation and periodic alterations have occurred as the community's recreation needs have changed. Despite the changes, the park retains numerous original design elements and remains as the final element completed as a part of the Olmsted plan for Buffalo's park system.[2]

Riverside Park
Entrance to Riverside Park
LocationRoughly bounded by Vulcan, Tonawanda, Crowley, and Niagara St., Buffalo, New York
Coordinates42°57′20″N 78°54′32″W
Area21.9 acres (8.9 ha)
Built1898
ArchitectOlmsted Bros.
MPSOlmsted Parks and Parkways TR
NRHP reference No.82005026[1]
Added to NRHPMarch 30, 1982

The park was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.[1]

Facilities and events

Some attractions include a playground, picnic areas, two public pools, tennis court, and a basketball court. The lighthouse facing Tonawanda street was recently relit after years of inoperation. The Bud Bakewell Arena, located on the Niagara Street side of the park directly facing the river, is an ice rink and lacrosse field, as well as home to youth hockey, Hasek's Heroes, and other sports affiliations. The park is also home to several baseball diamonds maintained by the River Rock Baseball League, a youth baseball and softball organization, and a fully renovated football field, home to the Black Rock Riverside Little League Football and Cheerleading organization. A winding road, Hotaling Drive, bisects the park at the edge of the football field. In July 2011, the park received additional grant funding for future development.

Riverside Parks hosted the annual Friendship Festival in the past along this road during the Independence Day holiday in conjunction with Fort Erie, Canada. In addition, the park hosts a seasonal farmer's market and other community events.

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gollark: I'm sure you'd like to think so.
gollark: *And* to erase the idea of ever doing the same thing from almost everyone else.
gollark: Evidently, the first person to realize the power of lace (and cereal bars) achieved financial domination over things via lace wealth, while using mind magic things to prevent knowledge of their secret lace-making activities from existing.
gollark: And magic is able to meddle with people's brains.

See also

References

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