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Waterfall Garden Park, Pioneer Square, Seattle, Washington. A pocket park (also known as a parkette, mini-park, vest-pocket park or vesty park) is a small park accessible to the general public. While the locations, elements, and uses of pocket parks vary considerably, the common defining characteristic of a pocket park is its small size. [1]
A planned pocket neighborhood on 3.7 acres (15,000 m 2) in Beloit, Wisconsin was designed to include geothermal heating and cooling and is a sustainable development that will use a common road at the back of the homes, geothermal energy, and a community tea garden, while limiting the need to remove existing oak trees on the property.
The trail system is part of 570 acres in one of New Jersey's most populated counties. In the past, the trail was mostly used by hikers and horseback riders, but since the creation of trails with multiple surfaces, including a car-wide macadam trail as well as dirt and gravel trails, [ 2 ] the park has become more user friendly for cyclists ...
Bluffton’s second pocket park will open to the public on election day. The May River Pocket Park, located at 1220 May River Road in front of the Stock Farm neighborhood and across from Downtown ...
Jun. 27—The long-awaited pocket park project at Wyoming Avenue and Linden Street in Scranton recently took a major step forward, with construction bids scheduled to be sought in July. The park ...
A panorama of the David Bradford mini-park, taken in 2023. The David Bradford Park is a small public park located at 53 Pine Street in Princeton, New Jersey. [1] Containing only a bench, a picnic table, and a few toys for toddlers, this mini-park is half a block away from Princeton’s central business district on Nassau Street.
Every community from Jupiter to Lake Park has a place you might have missed where people come to play, chat and reflect. Here are six favorites. North county's 'pocket parks': Six sites for fun ...
The Kingsland explosion was an incident that took place during World War I at a munitions factory in Lyndhurst, New Jersey, United States, on January 11, 1917. An arbitration commission in 1931 determined that, "In the Kingsland Case the Commission finds upon the evidence that the fire was not caused by any German agent."