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Features include 7.5 miles (12.1 km) of trails, two playscapes on either side of the park, a nature play area for children, dog parks on both sides of the park, picnic facilities, basketball courts, an outdoor classroom, a children's vegetable garden, a wildscape demonstration garden, a restored wetland, the Salado Creek overlook, the Skywalk, and the Robert L.B Tobin Land Bridge.
Notably, the park contains a "gift from South Korea to the people of San Antonio", [2] in the form of a Korean pavilion similar in design to the Gwangju Democracy Bell, in Gwangju South Korea. The pavilion (which reflects the traditional Korean methods of construction) was designed to "facilitate business and cultural friendships" between the ...
San Antonio Botanical Garden; San Antonio International Airport; San Antonio station (Texas) San Antonio Zoo; SeaWorld San Antonio; Six Flags Fiesta Texas; South Texas Building; South Texas Nuclear Generating Station; Splashtown San Antonio; Staacke Brothers Building; Stevens Building (San Antonio, Texas) Stinson Municipal Airport
In 1984, it was renamed by a new owner to The San Antonio Rose Palace and later to the Twin Oaks Exposition Center. [ 1 ] Investor Michael Hopkins purchased the equestrian center from the Resolution Trust Corporation in 1992, which was liquidating assets of First State Savings, an insolvent San Antonio savings and loan association.
Splashtown San Antonio was a water park located in San Antonio, Texas, USA. Its most recent name was "Splashtown USA". The park opened in 1985 as Water Park USA. It was sold to Wave Management, its second owner, in 1989. Its third owner since it opened was Chrismari Inc. of San Antonio.
San Antonio Missions National Historical Park (1 C, 10 P) Pages in category "Parks in San Antonio" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total.
Thousands of UTEP students are experiencing long wait times online as parking permits went on sale at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, July 30. Only an hour after the parking portal became accessible, the ...
The King William Historic District of San Antonio, Texas was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Bexar County, Texas on January 20, 1972. [1] The area was originally used as farm acreage by the Spanish priests of the Misión San Antonio de Valero, and eventually parceled off for the local indigenous peoples of the area. [2]