The City of College Station received a $750,000 grant from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission for the Texas Independence Park project. According to a city news release, grant-specific bike elements include a bike trail, a pump track, a dual elevated hub, wall rides, and surface flow trails. The park will also feature a playground, dog park, fishing pond, natural surface trails, and an 18-hole disc golf course. At the last city council meeting, the council unanimously approved a change order for the cancelled construction contract of the ballfields that were not built on the land due to soil issues. Capital Projects director Jennifer Cain says the deductive closeout change order is for more than $10.9 million. “They did complete the restroom building and all the other underground work that we discussed previously and the restroom building was completed this fall,” says Cain. The project is still in the design phase and construction could start this fall. News release from City of College Station: The City of College Station has received a $750,000 grant from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission for the Texas Independence Park at Midtown project. In August, the College Station City Council approved the park’s master plan for about 68 acres on Rock Prairie Road. Grant-specific bike elements include a bike trail, a pump track, a dual elevated hub, wall rides, and surface flow trails. The park will also feature a destination playground, dog park, fishing pond, natural surface trails, and an 18-hole disc golf course. The project is in the design phase, and construction will start as early as next fall. College Station was among 21 communities to receive non-urban grants, which fund projects in municipalities with populations under 500,000. The commission approved over $30.9 million in local park grants, a new record, to help create and enhance outdoor recreational opportunities in 50 community parks across Texas. The competitive grants are allocated to local government entities on a 50/50 reimbursement match basis. Once funded, the sites must remain parkland, properly maintained, and open to the public.