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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART:20170507T150000Z
DTEND:20170507T170000Z
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SUMMARY:Grand Opening of Dorrance Park Trails
DESCRIPTION:The Rock Island County Forest Preserve District will open the first of a three-part multi-use trail system at Dorrance Park at 307 Agnes St.\, Port Byron\, Ill.\, on Sunday\, May 7.\n\n \n\nWith the goal to enhance and diversify recreational opportunities in Port Byron and northern Rock Island County\, the Rock Island County Forest Preserve District along with their partners\, Friends of Off-Road Cycling (FORC)\, River Action and the Village of Port Byron\, IL\, created a plan to develop a multiuse\, human powered\, trail system at Dorrance Park.\n\n \n\n"In 2015\, we partnered with FORC and had a dream to open a trail system at Dorrance Park\," said Jeff Craver\, forest preserve district director. "Now\, two years later\, that dream has become a reality. We're thrilled to celebrate the grand opening of our trail system with members of the community and our partners!"\n\n \n\nDorrance Park spans over 81 acres of land. The new trail system will be 3.5 miles long and will include three difficulty levels\, ranging from beginner to expert.\n\n \n\n"The district staff and FORC developed the trails with a sustainable design in mind\," said Craver. "Each phase of the trail system will have a low environmental impact\, using natural surfaces to create paths. It will help further our mission of conservation\, education and of course\, play and recreation."\n\n \n\nThe 1.6-mile beginner trail\, also called the green trail\, will be suited for short nature walks\, beginner mountain bikers and cross country skiing. It will be the widest of the three trails at 18 to 24 inches wide\, will have a smooth service and will include a bypass option for shorter route options. It will feature a 33-foot bridge crossing a deeply incised stream.\n\n \n\nThe intermediate level blue trail will be more physically demanding than the green\, suitable for seasoned hikers\, mountain bikers and trail runners. The 1.1-mile trail will have a slightly narrower tread\, capping off at 18 inches wide. There will be optional challenging trail features and some trail surface roughness.\n\n \n\nThe toughest part of the course is the black trail\, or expert trail\, spanning 1.1 miles. The more challenging trail will require additional physical exertion because of the elevation changes\, steeper grades (10-15 percent)\, difficult natural obstacles and less developed\, rough trail surface. It will be ideal for those users looking for a more challenging or primitive experience for mountain biking\, hiking and running.\n\n \n\nThe typical cost per mile of professionally built trails can be more than $15\,000 in steep terrain. Total\, it would cost an estimated $52\,500 to build 3.5 miles of trail at Dorrance Park. However\, thanks to the partnership between the District and FORC\, the labor for trail development will be 100 percent completed by volunteers and district staff.\n\n \n\n"By the time the trail system is complete\, the FORC volunteers will have put in more than 2\,500 volunteer hours at Dorrance Park\," Craver said. "We can't express in words how grateful we are to them!"\n\n \n\nHard costs for the project total $6\,000 and cover trail structures such as bridges and boardwalks\, signage and tools for volunteers. The Rock Island County Forest Preserve funded $3\,000 of project expenses\, $1\,500 was contributed by the Village of Port Byron\, Ill.\, and the remaining $1\,500 was matched by River Action.  \n\n \n\nConstruction on the green trail took eight months to complete and finished in March 2017. To celebrate the completion of phase one\, Dorrance Park will host a groundbreaking event from 10 a.m. to noon on Sunday\, May 7\, open to the public. \n\n \n\nThe event will include a summary of the development process and progress points\, and will end with a group bike ride and group hike lead by FORC. Itinerary of the morning is as follows: \n\n	10 a.m.   Introduction of partners and project overview\n	10:30 a.m.   Ribbon cutting\n	10:45 a.m.   FORC-sponsored group ride and hike\, and time for questions with RICFPD and partners.\n\n	                \n\nThe Upper Rock Island County Recreational Association (URICRA) will open the concession stand at Dorrance Park and sell burgers\, brats\, chips\, candy and drinks.\n\n \n\nThe green trail will remain open to the public as progress continues on the blue and black trails. Construction is already underway for the blue intermediate trail. It will take five months to construct and is expected to open in Spring 2018. The black expert trail will wrap up in Spring 2019 and will take six months to complete.\n\n \n\nTo learn more about this project and the Rock Island County Forest Preserve District visit http://www.qcforc.org/content.php?221-Dorrance-Forest-Preserve and www.RICFPD.org.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">The Rock Island County Forest Preserve District will open the first of a three-part multi-use trail system at Dorrance Park at 307 Agnes St.\, Port Byron\, Ill.\, on Sunday\, May 7.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nWith the goal to enhance and diversify recreational opportunities in Port Byron and northern Rock Island County\, the Rock Island County Forest Preserve District along with their partners\, <a href="http://www.qcforc.org/forum.php">Friends of Off-Road Cycling (FORC)</a>\, <a href="http://www.riveraction.org/">River Action</a> and <a href="https://portbyronil.com/">the Village of Port Byron\, IL</a>\, created a plan to develop a multiuse\, human powered\, trail system at Dorrance Park.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\n&ldquo\;In 2015\, we partnered with FORC and had a dream to open a trail system at Dorrance Park\,&rdquo\; said Jeff Craver\, forest preserve district director. &ldquo\;Now\, two years later\, that dream has become a reality. We&rsquo\;re thrilled to celebrate the grand opening of our trail system with members of the community and our partners!&rdquo\;<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nDorrance Park spans over 81 acres of land. The new trail system will be 3.5 miles long and will include three difficulty levels\, ranging from beginner to expert.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\n&ldquo\;The district staff and FORC developed the trails with a sustainable design in mind\,&rdquo\; said Craver. &ldquo\;Each phase of the trail system will have a low environmental impact\, using natural surfaces to create paths. It will help further our mission of conservation\, education and of course\, play and recreation.&rdquo\;<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nThe 1.6-mile beginner trail\, also called the green trail\, will be suited for short nature walks\, beginner mountain bikers and cross country skiing. It will be the widest of the three trails at 18 to 24 inches wide\, will have a smooth service and will include a bypass option for shorter route options. It will feature a 33-foot bridge crossing a deeply incised stream.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nThe intermediate level blue trail will be more physically demanding than the green\, suitable for seasoned hikers\, mountain bikers and trail runners. The 1.1-mile trail will have a slightly narrower tread\, capping off at 18 inches wide. There will be optional challenging trail features and some trail surface roughness.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nThe toughest part of the course is the black trail\, or expert trail\, spanning 1.1 miles. The more challenging trail will require additional physical exertion because of the elevation changes\, steeper grades (10-15 percent)\, difficult natural obstacles and less developed\, rough trail surface. It will be ideal for those users looking for a more challenging or primitive experience for mountain biking\, hiking and running.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nThe typical cost per mile of professionally built trails can be more than $15\,000 in steep terrain. Total\, it would cost an estimated $52\,500 to build 3.5 miles of trail at Dorrance Park. However\, thanks to the partnership between the District and FORC\, the labor for trail development will be 100 percent completed by volunteers and district staff.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\n&ldquo\;By the time the trail system is complete\, the FORC volunteers will have put in more than 2\,500 volunteer hours at Dorrance Park\,&rdquo\; Craver said. &ldquo\;We can&rsquo\;t express in words how grateful we are to them!&rdquo\;<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nHard costs for the project total $6\,000 and cover trail structures such as bridges and boardwalks\, signage and tools for volunteers. The Rock Island County Forest Preserve funded $3\,000 of project expenses\, $1\,500 was contributed by the Village of Port Byron\, Ill.\, and the remaining $1\,500 was matched by River Action. &nbsp\;<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nConstruction on the green trail took eight months to complete and finished in March 2017. To celebrate the completion of phase one\, Dorrance Park will host a groundbreaking event from 10 a.m. to noon on Sunday\, May 7\, open to the public.&nbsp\;<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nThe event will include a summary of the development process and progress points\, and will end with a group bike ride and group hike lead by FORC. Itinerary of the morning is as follows: </span></span>\n<ul>\n	<li style="margin-bottom:0in\;margin-bottom:.0001pt\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><strong>10 a.m. &ndash\; </strong>Introduction of partners and project overview</span></span></li>\n	<li style="margin-bottom:0in\;margin-bottom:.0001pt\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><strong>10:30 a.m. &ndash\; </strong>Ribbon cutting</span></span></li>\n	<li style="margin-bottom:0in\;margin-bottom:.0001pt\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><strong>10:45 a.m. &ndash\; </strong>FORC-sponsored group ride and hike\, and time for questions with RICFPD and partners.<br />\n	&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; </span></span></li>\n</ul>\n<span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">The Upper Rock Island County Recreational Association (URICRA) will open the concession stand at Dorrance Park and sell burgers\, brats\, chips\, candy and drinks.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nThe green trail will remain open to the public as progress continues on the blue and black trails. Construction is already underway for the blue intermediate trail. It will take five months to construct and is expected to open in Spring 2018. The black expert trail will wrap up in Spring 2019 and will take six months to complete.<br />\n&nbsp\;<br />\nTo learn more about this project and the Rock Island County Forest Preserve District visit <a href="http://www.qcforc.org/content.php?221-Dorrance-Forest-Preserve">http://www.qcforc.org/content.php?221-Dorrance-Forest-Preserve</a> and <a href="http://www.ricfpd.org/">www.RICFPD.org</a>.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</span></span><br />\n&nbsp\;
LOCATION:Dorrance Park 401 Agnes St. Port Byron\, IL 61275
UID:e.2843.5825
SEQUENCE:3
DTSTAMP:20260424T032118Z
URL:https://member.quadcitieschamber.com/events/details/grand-opening-of-dorrance-park-trails-5825
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