Safety City Proposed South of Central Park

Update:

No one on the College Station city council was opposed to the idea of the “Brazos Valley Safety City”, a complex of buildings and streets for children to learn safety education.

Among council questions during a Thursday workshop was the distance from an oil well. That’s in light of a recent ordinance change restricting developers within 1,000 feet of a well. The city is exempted from that requirement.

Those submitting the request were also asked to submit a more comprehensive request that covers expectations of manpower assistance from the police and fire departments.

The requested location is along the freeway south of Central Park, next to the future “Fun For All” special needs playground. City Manager Kelly Templin says that would require a permit from the Texas Department of Transportation to connect a driveway to the freeway’s southbound frontage road.

Original story:

More development may be coming south of College Station’s Central Park.

Last year, several service organizations received the green light from the city council to start fundraising for the “Fun For All” playground inside the park, serving those with special needs.

Now, the council has been asked to donate city owned-land south of the “Fun For All” playground along the freeway for the construction of “Brazos Valley Safety City”.

The $2.9 million dollar concept, from Texas A&M AgriLife Extension and the Texas Department of Transportation, is described as “a kid-sized mini-town set in a safe and interactive environment dedicated to providing exemplary safety education to children”.

This would serve Kindergarten through fifth grade students living in Brazos and the remaining nine counties in the TxDOT Bryan district.

Safety City includes a classroom building and 5/8th scale replicas of local buildings, roads with realistic pavement markings, traffic signals, and street signs.

Another feature is a child-sized bedroom with a non-toxic smoke machine where children learn how to escape a fire.

Children would also ride bicycles and battery operated vehicles to learn pedestrian and motor vehicle safety.

The project, which is part of the council’s Thursday workshop agenda, does not have a timeline to build and open the area.

Click HERE to view the background information given to the College Station city council.

Preliminary architectural designs of Brazos Valley Safety City from Texas A&M AgriLife Extension
Preliminary architectural designs of Brazos Valley Safety City from Texas A&M AgriLife Extension

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