HomeMy WebLinkAboutThomas Marcuccilli Nature Park Master Plan (2023)Master Plan
Thomas Marcuccilli Nature Park
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Acknowledgments
Susan Bacher, Deputy Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, Delaware Tribe
Matt Bussler, Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, Pokagon Band of Potawatomi
Rhonda Hayworth, Tribal Preservation Officer, Ottawa Tribe of Oklahoma
Norman Hildebrand, Second Chief, Wyandotte Nation
Diane Hunter, Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, Miami Nation
Tonya Tipton, Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, Shawnee Tribe
Logan York, Deputy Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, Miami Tribe of Oklahoma
Dr. Jessica Beer, Carmel/Clay Board of Parks and Recreation (2019-2022)
Sue Finkham, City Councilor of Northeast District - City of Carmel
Steve Horn, Board of Harvest Church
Mark Westermeier, Carmel/Clay Board of Parks and Recreation
Kevin Nolan, Ph.D.
Christine Thompson
Michael W. Klitzing, Director of Parks & Recreation / CEO
Kurtis Baumgartner, Assistant Director of Parks & Recreation / COO
Michael Allen, Parks & Natural Resources Director
Eric Mehl, Administration & Planning Director
Jylian Riches, Marketing & Communications Director
Natalie Carson, Planning & Legal Coordinator
Richard F Taylor III, President
Jenn Kristunas, Vice President
Linus Rude, Secretary
Lin Zhang, Treasurer
James D. Garretson
Joshua A. Kirsh
Mark Westermeier
Carrie Holle
Kristin Kouka
Expanding trails and environmental education
near the White River will fulfill several goals and
recommendations outlined in CCPR’s 2020-2024
Comprehensive Parks and Recreation Master Plan.
Project Website:
www.carmelclayparks.com/parks/thomas-marcuccilli-nature-park/
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Acknowledgments
Brad Baldwin, IDNR
Jill Hoffman, Executive Director - White River Alliance
Darren Mindham, Urban Forestry - City of Carmel
Kevin Tungesvick, Senior Ecologist - Eco Logic LLC
Doug Callahan, Clay Township Trustee (2007-2022)
Jim Engledow , Former Member of Carmel/Clay Board of Parks and Recreation
Dave Haboush, Fire Chief - City of Carmel
Andy Wright, Historian - Carmel Clay Historical Society
Grace Fugate, Administration Assistant
Steve Horn, Board of Harvest Church
Brian White, Pastor
Letter from Director
On behalf of Carmel Clay Parks & Recreation, it is my honor to share the Thomas
Marcuccilli Nature Park Master Plan. It has been a privilege to work alongside our
community to identify the needs this park can meet. Throughout the pages of the master
plan, you’ll find the foundational vision for the future of the park.
The parkland was received as a donation from Falcon Nest II, LLC in 2021 and is named
in honor of Thomas Marcuccilli, a Hoosier and co-founder of STAR Financial Bank. The
63 acres present a truly unique opportunity for CCPR. As its name implies, this park
will offer a space to experience and celebrate nature, while exploring the park’s unique
ecology and history.
I want to thank everyone who contributed their time and feedback to this master plan.
We are ever grateful for a community that is invested in its parks. We value the input and
conversation with neighbors, students, community leaders, nature enthusiasts, Native
American tribes, and anthropologists who have inspired the park’s design.
This master plan is just the first step toward the future of Thomas Marcuccilli Nature Park.
Working with our community leaders to secure funding, CCPR looks forward to bringing
the vision outlined in this master plan to life.
Recreationally yours,
Michael W. Klitzing, CPRE
Director of Parks & Recreation / CEO
Carmel Clay Parks & Recreation
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INDEX
The park is named for Thomas Marcuccilli (pronounced The park is named for Thomas Marcuccilli (pronounced
Mark-a-sell-e), a native Hoosier and one of the original Mark-a-sell-e), a native Hoosier and one of the original
founders of STAR Financial Bank.founders of STAR Financial Bank.
8 9
REFERENCEMATERIAL
AMERICAN
INDIAN BEADWORK. FIRST FIRESIDE EDITION.
PREHISTORIC ANTIQUITIES INDIANA.
INDIANA HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
NATIVE AMERICAN
ETHNOBOTONY. TIMBER PRESS.
AMERICAN INDIAN BASKETRY
TWO VOLUMES BOUND IN ONE. DOVER PUBLICATIONS
THE
GEOLOGIC STORY . HTTPS://IGWS.INDIANA.EDU/
REFERENCEDOCS/STATEPARKGUIDE_POKAGON.PDF
NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN
BEADWORK PATTERNS. DOVER PUBLICATIONS.
10 11
CHILDHOOD
DEVELOPMENT AND ACCESS TO NATURE: A NEW
DIRECTION FOR ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUALITY
RESEARCH. ORGAN ENVIRON.
12 13
14 15
INTRODUCTION
Thomas Marcuccilli Nature Park will enhance park
and recreation opportunities within the community by
expanding trails and environmental education near the
White River.
FUTURE COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT
EXISTING
COMMERCIAL
CONNER PRAIRIE
LEGACY WELL NO. 26
LEGACY WELL NO. 25
HARVEST CHURCH
HISTORIC CORN CRIB
16 17
There is a vital need to balance human and natural
systems, resources, and processes. Park development
must serve multiple functions.
18 19
20 21
Text from Andy
Wright's report is highlighted in bold.
Prior to the development of any park site, Carmel
Clay Parks & Recreation will continue to research
the legacy of the land and history of the property.
Hundreds of millions of years ago, Indiana was
covered by a shallow sea. As the White River
and Carmel's creeks erode their banks and beds,
fossils of prehistoric sea creatures are brought to
the surface.
"Glaciation erased any trace of the dinosaurs,
leaving behind a legacy of geology and landscape
formations. As the glacier melted, water transported
and deposited outwash of sorted and stratified
sand, silt, gravel, and clay. Outwash forms the core
of kames, eskers, and other meltwater landforms.
Erratics of granite, gneiss, basalt, and other igneous
and metamorphic rocks are also prevalent. These
massive boulders were plucked from the bedrock
surface in Canada and transported to Indiana by the
glaciers. When masses of ice would become buried
by thick insulating debris, they would remain long
12,980 - 1000 B.C. PLEISTOCENE ERA
after all other glacial ice melted. Eventually, they,
too, melted, leaving ice block depressions or kettle
holes. The glaciers took centuries to melt, and plant
communities colonized and migrated northward over
the debris left behind. The postglacial succession
from spruce to pine and finally to oak forest indicates
the general warming of the climate."
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN2022 1011
Design Driver - Ancient Ecology
HISTORY OF THE LAND
22 23
Residents have found evidence
of prehistoric mammals. Ice Age fossils are rare
in Carmel, but there was a significant find on the
Lacy farm, part of which constitutes the northeast
corner of the Thomas Marcuccilli Nature Park. In
1893, four mastodon teeth were discovered when
a ditch was dug on the farm.
The teeth from the upper jaw measured about
eight inches across, and those from the lower jaw
were about six inches. Two of the teeth weighed
thirteen pounds. In 1905, Joseph McDonald found
part of a tooth from a mammoth in Vestal Ditch
a mile west of the park site in the Cherry Creek
Estates subdivision.
Indiana Geological and Water
Survey, Indiana University).
The soil found at Thomas Marcuccilli Nature Park
is one of the most beneficial legacies of the Ice Age.
The teeth from the upper jaw measured eight inches
across, and those from the lower jaw were about six
inches.
24 25
Residents have also collected artifacts from
early Native Americans. Some date as far back
as the Early Archaic period. Stone tools, such as
arrowheads, hammers, tomahawks, whetstones,
mortars, and pestles, were once prevalent;
hundreds, if not thousands, were found on
Carmel's east side. These are rarer today, but
they are still occasionally discovered. In 2017, a
city engineer found a banner stone during the
construction of a roundabout at Smoky Row Road
and Gray Road. The artifact was thought to be as
many as four thousand years old. Archaeological
finds suggest there was activity as far back as the
Late Archaic period near the site of the nature
park.
The first people of record in Carmel were the
Lenape, also known as the Delaware Indians. At
the time of first contact with Europeans in the
early 1600s, the Lenape lived in the Delaware
Valley near Philadelphia. Two centuries of
European colonialism and American expansionism
splintered the Tribe, greatly diminished their
population, and pushed them west into the
Ohio River Valley. After an alliance of Tribes was
defeated in the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794,
the Lenape ceded much of their land in Ohio and
Pennsylvania to the United States. The Miami
invited the displaced Tribes to settle in their
territory, allocating the area around White River
to the Lenape.
In August 1802, William Conner built a log trading
post in a prairie on the east side of White River,
where Conner Prairie is today. A Lenape village
developed around the trading post and became
called Conner's Town. It extended across the river
just east of the park site. Other Lenape villages
in the area included Upper Delaware Town,
about two miles north of Conner's Town in what
was known as the Horseshoe Prairie, Ketchum's
Town along Cool Creek in present-day Carmel,
and Lower Delaware Town, which was a half mile
south of the Marion County line.
During the War of 1812, Indiana Territorial
Governor William Henry Harrison was concerned
that the Lenape would be pulled into the conflict
and give up their neutrality, so he moved the
Tribe from their villages along the White River
to an abandoned Shawnee town in Piqua, Ohio.
Many abandoned villages along the White River
were burned to the ground during the war. This
was the fate of the village site located near the
nature park. It was not resettled when the Lenape
returned to Indiana.
Cultural preservation will be an important element
of the sustainable development of this park site.
In 1818, John and William Conner influenced
the Lenape into signing the treaty of St. Mary's,
in which the Tribe relinquished its claim to the
land along the White River in exchange for a
reservation west of the Mississippi River. The
Tribe was given three years to vacate the ground,
after which it was opened for settlement.
However, pioneers began to establish squatter
settlements soon after the treaty was signed.
Some settled in the prairies around William
Conner's trading post.
George Shirts and his family were the first to
arrive in what is now Hamilton County. They
settled in Conner's Town in March 1819. Later
that month, Charles Lacy became the first to
settle in Carmel when he set up camp on the
remnants of the Lenape village site on the west
bank of White River opposite Conner's Town.
That spring, he planted a crop of corn in
a field the Lenape had cultivated for the same
purpose. He built a cabin and brought his wife
Mary and their eight children to the site in
September. The northeast corner of the park site
was entered by Charles Lacy in September 1822.
Bethel Dunning and Benjamin Blythe entered the
remainder of the park site in 1834 and 1835.
River Road was originally a Lenape trail that
connected Barbara Burget's trading post on the
Marion County line to the Upper Delaware Town
in what came to be called the Horseshoe Prairie.
This trail was also part of the first county road
The Lacy farm remained in the Lacy family until
Tunis Gerard purchased it in 1881. Gerard sold
the farm around the turn of the century. Around
1920, John Owen purchased about four hundred
acres that included the old Lacy farm and the park
site and operated Owen Dairies, Inc. Before the
company dissolved in 1935, it had the county's
largest herd of dairy cows.
In 1934 Eli Lilly purchased farms on the east
and west of White River, including the original
Conner homestead and Owen's dairy, which
he transformed into a horse, grain, and hog
farm. Lilly's massive farm covered about fifteen
hundred acres and employed twenty-two full-time
farmhands, many of whom lived on the property.
Lilly kept carpenters on staff year-round to keep
the buildings and fences in good repair. The farm
continued operation on the west side of the river
until the 1990s.
Plat maps dating back to 1866 and aerials from
1936 to the present indicate no buildings on the
park site. There were dwellings east of the area
along River Road in the nineteenth century and
farm buildings during the Owen Dairy and Conner
Prairie Farm years, but these were outside
the park's boundaries. It will be a significant
discovery worthy of further investigation if a
foundation is uncovered during site work for the
park.
petitioned in August 1823. The road commenced
at the Madison County border just north of
White River, crossed the river at Strawtown, and
followed the path of the Lenape trail past Lacy's
farm to Burget's trading post. Parts of Hazel Dell
Parkway, 116th Street, and River Road follow the
course of this two-hundred-year-old road.
26 27
202119201933196318812005
1835200 18221000 1834BCBC
Historic Timeline and List of Inhabitants
1000 - 200 B.C. ADENA CULTURE 200 B.C. - 1812 NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBES 1813 PRESENT DAY
28 29
30 31
1962
1936
1974 1976
1941
TREE CANOPY
RIVER ROAD & ROADWAYS
1956
Historic Aerial Photography
32 33
20001997 2001
Historic Aerial Photography
2008 2009 2010
LANDFORM
34 35
2016
2021
Historic Aerial Photography
2017 2018
20152014AGRICULTURE
DEVELOPMENT
36 37
38 39
SITE ANALYSIS
Understanding these conditions allowed for a
more thorough design process of the nature park.
Collectively, the data shows how the site functions as
a system with complex forces at play.
The master plan was born from an intensive and
thorough site analysis phase.
40 41
The ridge landform that is centrally located on the
site would have provided an optimal location to
access many of the area's natural resources.
42 43
44 45
The soil composition limits the implementation of conventionally
built structures and the planting of most tree types.
745.74
743.18
746.05
743.57
747.13
744.19
46 47
The Tribal Representatives Advisory Group expressed
an interest in creating an ethnobotany interpretive
garden. It was noted that some plants in the
different groups brought across geographies for their
culture and use are considered non-native.
48 49
50 51
Future development of these zones will be studied with
plant ecologists and Parks and Natural Resources
maintenance staff to develop a diverse nature experience
with multiple seasonal aspects.
52 53
54 55
A process to create a framework plan to guide the
future development of the park site.
MASTER PLAN PROCESS 1-3
4-7
8-12
March/April - Setting the Foundation
May - Opportunities & Concept Alternative
August - Refinement & Report
56 57
3 4 512THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN2022 1011
Design Driver - Ancient Ecology
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011river roadriver roadCherry Creek BlvdCherry Creek BlvdCommunity driveCommunity driveSimpliCity pkwySimpliCity pkwyhopewell parkwayhopewell parkway e 146e 146th th StreetStreet BeallSville drBeallSville drBarker drBarker drde
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Woodlot
Grove at The Grove at The
LegacyLegacy
Prairie at The Prairie at The
LegacyLegacy
Legacy Towns & Legacy Towns &
FlatsFlats
Legacy Towns & Legacy Towns & FlatsFlats
Harvest Church Harvest Church
ExpansionExpansion
Future Commercial DevelopmentFuture Commercial Development
Harvest ChurchHarvest Church
Conner PrairieConner Prairie
Existing CommercialExisting Commercial Development Development
Ecological Ecological HistoryHistory
Progressive Progressive Land Land ManagementManagement
Settler Settler HistoryHistory
Indigenous Indigenous History & History & InterpretationInterpretation
Storytelling Districts: Ecological History
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011
Goals & Objectives
PROJECT GOAL NO. 1 - PRESERVE UNIQUE NATURE AND EXPERIENCE OF THE SITE
PROJECT GOAL NO. 2 - ACCOMMODATE PASSIVE USAGE
PROJECT GOAL NO. 3 - PROVIDE EDUCATION AND RICH STORYTELLING FROM UNIQUE PERSPECTIVES
PROJECT GOAL NO. 4 - CONNECTIVITY
PROJECT GOAL NO. 5 - INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO PLANNING
PRESERVE UNIQUE NATURE AND
EXPERIENCE OF THE SITE.
ACCOMMODATE PASSIVE USAGE.PROVIDE EDUCATION AND STORYTELLING
FROM UNIQUE PERSPECTIVES.
CONNECTIVITY TO THE SURROUNDING
COMMUNITY.
INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO
PLANNING.
Project Goals
58 59
Focus Group Feedback
60 61
62 63
32
Three concepts were presented with the goal of
instigating conversation and vetting ideas.
1
CONCEPT ALTERNATIVES
64 65
The park infrastructure would support and
incorporate the stories of the site into a visitor
experience.
This landscape has been the stage for many stories
over time. Touchstone to the Past
66 67
This concept allows for a more diverse set of
ecological experiences to exist within the site.
Park infrastructure follows the lead of the land.
Forms based on an overlay of soil typology with
topographic information.
Landscape Forward
68 69
Views of the landscape would be amplified over
immersive accessibility to and through nature.
A study of light infrastructure and minimal
approach to implementation of a nature park. Framework Plan
Community Feedback
70 71
72 73
74 757475
76 77
D
I
I
J
Harvest CHurCH
PLaNNeD exPaNsioN
WELL NO. 26 &
OVERLOOK
WELL NO. 25
HARVEST CHURCH
CoNNer Prairie
FooD, FarM &
eNerGY exHiBit
ENTRY SIGNAGE
ENTRY SIGNAGE
HISTORIC CORN CRIB
HOA
WOODLAND
WHite river eDuCatioN &
eCoLoGY CeNter
TRAILHEAD
TRAILHEAD
TRAILHEAD
TRAILHEAD / MAIN ENTRANCE
TRAILHEAD
TRAILHEADTRAILHEAD
ENH
A
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C
E
D
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X
.
W
A
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LaNDsCaPe
DePressioN
LaNDsCaPe
DePressioN
A
B
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E
E
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F
C
G
G
G
H
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A
B
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F
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PREFERRED CONCEPT
78 79
TRIBAL INTERPRETATION
PROGRESSIVE LAND
MANAGEMENT
AGRARIAN HISTORY &
SETTLEMENT
ANCIENT ECOLOGY
Aerial View of Overall Park The trail system will align with the form of the natural ecological
zones of the site. This arrangement will help facilitate the maintenance
requirements of each programmed habitat zone.
80 81
82 83
The site's soils would have supported a plant community
like a fen, marsh, or sedge meadow. Woodland -- Ancient Ecology
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011
Design Driver - Ancient Ecology
Landform remnant:
existiNG MuLCH PatH
traiLHeaD
84 85
Soil remnant:
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011
Design Driver - Ancient Ecology
Woodland remnant:
86 87
88 89
Hopewell Trailhead
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011
Public Restrooms
Pedestrian Trails
Service / Emergency Drive
Sculpture / Public Art Feature
Passive Play Space
Wetlands
Overlooks
Cargo Netting Feature
Interactive Boulder Outcropping
Terraced Seating
Parking
0’100’200’300’
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI SITE MASTER PLAN
CARMEL CLAY PARKS AND RECREATION
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK
Date 2022 0729
River
R
o
a
d
River
R
o
a
d
Cherry Creek BlvdCherry Creek BlvdCommunity DriveCommunity DriveSimplicity PkwySimplicity PkwyHopewell PkwyHopewell Pkwy
E 146E 146th th StreetStreet
Beallsville DrBeallsville Drbarker Drbarker Dr
de
l
m
o
n
t
B
l
v
d
de
l
m
o
n
t
B
l
v
d
(Harvest Church
Expansion)
(Potential Event
Location)
White River
Existing Commercial
Harvest Church
(Future Development)
Conner Prairie
A
F
B
G
C
H
D
I
E
J
K
K
K
K
A
A
A
B
B
B
C
D
D
E
F
F
F
F
G
G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
Public Restrooms
Pedestrian Trails
Service / Emergency Drive
Sculpture / Public Art Feature
Passive Play Space
Wetlands
Overlooks
Cargo Netting Feature
Interactive Boulder Outcropping
Terraced Seating
Parking
0’100’200’300’
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI SITE MASTER PLAN
CARMEL CLAY PARKS AND RECREATION
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK
Date 2022 0729
River
R
o
a
d
River
R
o
a
d
Cherry Creek BlvdCherry Creek BlvdCommunity DriveCommunity DriveSimplicity PkwySimplicity PkwyHopewell PkwyHopewell Pkwy
E 146E 146th th StreetStreet
Beallsville DrBeallsville Drbarker Drbarker Dr
de
l
m
o
n
t
B
l
v
d
de
l
m
o
n
t
B
l
v
d
(Harvest Church
Expansion)
(Potential Event
Location)
White River
Existing Commercial
Harvest Church
(Future Development)
Conner Prairie
A
F
B
G
C
H
D
I
E
J
K
K
K
K
A
A
A
B
B
B
C
D
D
E
F
F
F
F
G
G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
SimpliCity parkway
SimpliCity parkway
hopewell parkwayhopewell parkway
BeallSville driveBeallSville drive
Preferred Concept: Park Entry at Hopewell Parkway
90 91
The Ridge -- Tribal Interpretation
1. Delaware Nation
2. Delaware Tribe of Indians
3. Miami Tribe of Oklahoma
4. Ottawa Tribe of Oklahoma
5. Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians
6. Shawnee Tribe
7. Wyandotte Nation
Table 1. The 10 plants with the greatest number of uses, and with uses in all five categories, by Native Americans
PLANT DRUG FOOD FIBER DYE OTHER TOTAL
Thujaplicata,WesternRedCedar 52 6 188 1 121 368
Prunusvirginiana,CommonChokecherry 132 163 4 2 36 337
Urticadioica,StingingNettle 114 20 36 1 51 222
Yuccabaccata,BananaYucca 9 126 47 1 39 222
Cornussericea,RedosierDogwood 97 21 9 6 58 191
Heracleummaximum,CommonCowparsnip 112 57 2 1 17 189
Rhustrilobata,SkunkbushSumac 38 69 29 11 34 181
Pseudotsugamenziesii,DouglasFir 67 18 18 1 72 176
Betulapapyrifera,PaperBirch 28 9 59 3 76 175
Populusbalsamifera,BalsamPoplar 103 16 18 1 35 173
The 10 plants with the greatest number of uses, regardless of category, by Native Americans
PLANT DRUG FO0D FIBER DYE OTHER TOTAL
Thujaplicata,WesternRedCedar 52 6 188 1 121 368
Achilleamillefolium,CommonYarrow 355 3 0 1 7 366
Prunusvirginiana,CommonChokecherry 132 163 4 2 36 337
Typhalatifolia,BroadleafCattail 50 71 105 0 28 254
Acoruscalamus,Calamus 219 4 0 1 5 229
Urticadioica,StingingNettle 114 20 36 1 51 222
Yuccabaccata,BananaYucca 9 126 47 1 39 222
Artemisiatridentata,BigSagebrush 166 5 11 0 34 216
Amelanchieralnifolia,SaskatoonServiceberry 30 117 7 0 38 192
Cornussericea,RedosierDogwood 97 21 9 6 58 191
Table 1. The 10 plants with the greatest number of uses, and with uses in all five categories, by Native Americans
PLANT DRUG FOOD FIBER DYE OTHER TOTAL
Thujaplicata,WesternRedCedar 52 6 188 1 121 368
Prunusvirginiana,CommonChokecherry 132 163 4 2 36 337
Urticadioica,StingingNettle 114 20 36 1 51 222
Yuccabaccata,BananaYucca 9 126 47 1 39 222
Cornussericea,RedosierDogwood 97 21 9 6 58 191
Heracleummaximum,CommonCowparsnip 112 57 2 1 17 189
Rhustrilobata,SkunkbushSumac 38 69 29 11 34 181
Pseudotsugamenziesii,DouglasFir 67 18 18 1 72 176
Betulapapyrifera,PaperBirch 28 9 59 3 76 175
Populusbalsamifera,BalsamPoplar 103 16 18 1 35 173
92 93
1. Ethnobotany
2. Land management practices
3. Patterning and Identification of Tribes
4. Artifacts found on or near the site
94 95
96 97
98 99
100 101
ParK eNtrY
overLooK seCtioN CutWeLL No. 25
aCCessiBLe BoarDWaLK
102 103
Cherry Creek Trailhead
104 105
Within the elevated boardwalk's structure, various additional
amenities will be provided, such as seating areas, interpretive signage,
shade, and lounge/hammock areas or swings for whimsical experiences
for all ages.
Elevated Boardwalk at 146th Street
106 107
Highly visible park spaces are safe park spaces.
The elevated boardwalk sits 10-12 feet above park grade
and activates an area of the park which currently has the
least amount of visibility.
Upper Terrace View of Park
108 109
110 111
Progressive Land Management
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011river roadriver roadCherry Creek BlvdCherry Creek BlvdCommunity driveCommunity driveSimpliCity pkwySimpliCity pkwyhopewell parkwayhopewell parkway
e 146e 146th th StreetStreet
BeallSville drBeallSville drBarker drBarker drde
l
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Woodlot
Grove at The Grove at The
LegacyLegacy
Prairie at The Prairie at The
LegacyLegacy
Legacy Towns & Legacy Towns &
FlatsFlats
Legacy Towns & Legacy Towns &
FlatsFlats
Harvest Church Harvest Church
ExpansionExpansion
Future Commercial DevelopmentFuture Commercial Development
Harvest ChurchHarvest Church
Conner PrairieConner Prairie
Existing CommercialExisting Commercial
Development Development
Design Driver - Landscape Forward
Zone 1Zone 1
Zone 2Zone 2
Zone 3Zone 3
Zone 4Zone 4
Zone 8Zone 8
Zone 7Zone 7
Zone 5Zone 5
Zone 6Zone 6
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011river roadriver roadCherry Creek BlvdCherry Creek BlvdCommunity driveCommunity driveSimpliCity pkwySimpliCity pkwyhopewell parkwayhopewell parkway
e 146e 146th th StreetStreet
BeallSville drBeallSville drBarker drBarker drde
l
m
o
n
t
B
lv
d
de
l
m
o
n
t
B
lv
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Woodlot
Grove at The Grove at The
LegacyLegacy
Prairie at The Prairie at The
LegacyLegacy
Legacy Towns & Legacy Towns &
FlatsFlats
Legacy Towns & Legacy Towns &
FlatsFlats
Harvest Church Harvest Church
ExpansionExpansion
Future Commercial DevelopmentFuture Commercial Development
Harvest ChurchHarvest Church
Conner PrairieConner Prairie
Existing CommercialExisting Commercial
Development Development
Design Driver - Landscape Forward
Zone 1Zone 1
Zone 2Zone 2
Zone 3Zone 3
Zone 4Zone 4
Zone 8Zone 8
Zone 7Zone 7
Zone 5Zone 5
Zone 6Zone 6
112 113
Parking & Gateway Entrance
114 115
Parking & Gateway Entrance
116 117
Lower Terrace View of Park Once the tree plantings around the perimeter of the park
establish, the experience in the Lower Terrace of TMNP
will feel immersive.
118 119
Agrarian History & Settlement
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011river roadriver roadCherry Creek BlvdCherry Creek BlvdCommunity driveCommunity driveSimpliCity pkwySimpliCity pkwyhopewell parkwayhopewell parkway
e 146e 146th th StreetStreet
BeallSville drBeallSville drBarker drBarker drde
l
m
o
n
t
B
lv
d
de
l
m
o
n
t
B
lv
d
Woodlot
Grove at The Grove at The
LegacyLegacy
Prairie at The Prairie at The
LegacyLegacy
Legacy Towns & Legacy Towns &
FlatsFlats
Legacy Towns & Legacy Towns &
FlatsFlats
Harvest Church Harvest Church
ExpansionExpansion
Future Commercial DevelopmentFuture Commercial Development
Harvest ChurchHarvest Church
Conner PrairieConner Prairie
Existing CommercialExisting Commercial
Development Development
Storytelling Districts : History of Settlement
Ecological Ecological HistoryHistory
Indigenous Indigenous History & History & InterpretationInterpretation
Progressive Progressive Land Land managementmanagement
Settler Settler HistoryHistory
120 121
Community Feedback and Analysis
122 123
As amenities for the park are developed, additional
focus should be on appropriate play elements and
animal habitat creation.
PUBLIC SURVEY REPORT & ANALYSIS
CARMEL CLAY PARKS & RECREATION
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK
2022 10 11
The following documentation is a working summary of the collected public survey
information that has been analyzed and used to create the appropriate graphs.
PUBLIC SURVEY REPORT & ANALYSIS
CARMEL CLAY PARKS & RECREATION
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK
2022 10 11
The following documentation is a working summary of the collected public survey
information that has been analyzed and used to create the appropriate graphs.
PUBLIC SURVEY REPORT & ANALYSIS
CARMEL CLAY PARKS & RECREATION
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK
2022 10 11
The following documentation is a working summary of the collected public survey
information that has been analyzed and used to create the appropriate graphs.
PUBLIC SURVEY REPORT & ANALYSIS
CARMEL CLAY PARKS & RECREATION
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK
2022 10 11
The following documentation is a working summary of the collected public survey
information that has been analyzed and used to create the appropriate graphs.
124 125
ENVIRONMENTAL:
SOCIAL:
RECREATIONAL:
PRO FORMA
126 127
128 129
Opinion of Probable Costs
130 131
Opinion of Probable Cost Estimate - PhasingPrepared by: MKSK Studios 200 South Meridian Street, Indianapolis, IN 46225(Based on MP plan set dated Aug. xx, 2022)
Date:Revised:
Calculated By:DJ Revised:
Checked By:CM Revised:
Project:Thomas Marcuccilli Master Plan File No.:n21217
Thomas Marcuccilli General Site Work Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4 Phase 5
Item Ext.Description Qty.Unit @ Unit Cost =Base Cost Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget
Earthwork
Site Clearing and Prep, Noxious Tree Removal, etc.1 Allow @ 50,000.00$ =50,000.00$ $10,000 $20,000 $10,000 $10,000
Erosion Control 1 Allow @ 50,000.00$ =50,000.00$ $10,000 $10,000 $10,000 $10,000 $10,000
Subtotal 100,000.00$
Pavements
AG-1 Crushed Aggregate Path - H-20: Vehicular Duty / Geotextile Fabric 42,800 Sq. Ft.@ 20.00$ =856,000.00$ $856,000
AS-1 Asphalt Paving Trail - Pedestrian (3" + 6")1,300 Sq. Yd.@ 65.00$ =84,500.00$ $84,500
CP-1 Concrete Pavement (Pedestrian)22,430 Sq. Ft.@ 8.00$ =179,440.00$ $179,440
CP-3 Concrete Pavement (Specialty - Architectural)3,250 Sq. Ft.@ 9.50$ =30,875.00$ $30,875
MT-1 Mulched Trails (Wooded Area)25,500 Sq. Ft.@ 7.00$ =178,500.00$ $178,500
Subtotal 1,329,315.00$
Parking Areas
Community Drive
Simplicity Parkway $126,975
Hopewell Parkway $35,134
Harvest Church Expansion $1,689,270
Subtotal 1,851,378.75$
Site Structures
PB1 Pedestrian Boardwalk - Typ. Elevated incl. ramps, overlooks, benches 27,850 Sq. Ft.@ 75.00$ =2,088,750.00$ $1,566,563 $522,188
PB1a Pedestrian Boardwalk Railing (Required)4,900 LF @ 225.00$ =1,102,500.00$ $826,875 $275,625
Page 1 of 3
Thomas Marcuccilli General Site Work Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4 Phase 5
Item Ext.Description Qty.Unit @ Unit Cost =Base Cost Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget
PB2 Pedestrian Boardwalk - Elevated & Flat, incl. overlooks, benches 51,500 Sq. Ft.@ 65.00$ =3,347,500.00$ $167,375 $669,500 $1,673,750 $836,875
PB2a Pedestrian Boardwalk Railing (Required)9,300 LF @ 75.00$ =697,500.00$ $34,875 $139,500 $348,750 $174,375
Pedestrian Boardwalk Path - At grade and flat, bumper rail required 81,950 Sq. Ft.@ 55.00$ =4,507,250.00$ $225,363 $2,028,263 $2,253,625
PB4 Vehicular Boardwalk - Structural H-20 Std.5,225 Sq. Ft.@ 250.00$ =1,306,250.00$ $1,306,250
VB1 Vehicular Bridge No. 1 (Steel Truss / Wood Decking / Railing)800 Sq. Ft.@ 160.00$ =128,000.00$ $128,000
VB2 Vehicular Bridge No. 2 (Steel Truss / Wood Decking / Railing)2,640 Sq. Ft.@ 190.00$ =501,600.00$ $501,600
VB3 Vehicular Bridge No. 3 (Steel Truss / Wood Decking / Railing)800 Sq. Ft.@ 160.00$ =128,000.00$ $128,000
Restroom 'B' - Hopewell Plaza 1 Allow @ 90,000.00$ =90,000.00$ $90,000
Restroom 'C' - Harvest Church 1 Allow @ 350,000.00$ =350,000.00$ $350,000
Subtotal 14,247,350.00$
Site Furnishings / Specialty Items
D-1 Sculpture / Public Art 1 Allow @ 150,000.00$ =150,000.00$ $75,000 $75,000
D-2 Sculpture / Public Art 1 Allow @ 250,000.00$ =250,000.00$ $125,000 $125,000
E-1 Passive Play Area 2,825 Each @ 15.00$ =42,375.00$ $21,188 $21,188
E-2 Passive Play Area Each @
H-1 Cargo Netting Area 835 Sq. Ft.@ 25.00$ =20,875.00$ $10,438 $10,438
H-2 Cargo Netting Area 3,100 Sq. Ft.@ 25.00$ =77,500.00$ $38,750 $38,750
I-1 Interactive Boulder Play Area 13,100 Sq. Ft.@ 20.00$ =262,000.00$ $262,000
I-2 Interactive Boulder Play Area 2,250 Each @ 20.00$ =45,000.00$ $22,500 $22,500
J-1 Terraced Seating 2,500 F.F.@ 45.00$ =112,500.00$ $56,250 $56,250
Signage 1 Allow @ 250,000.00$ =250,000.00$ $125,000 $125,000
Subtotal 1,210,250.00$
Landscaping
Prairie/Meadow Planting 13.5 Acre @ 4,500.00$ =60,750.00$ $12,150 $24,300 $6,075 $12,150 $6,075
Wetland/Fen Planting 41.4 Acre @ 4,500.00$ =186,300.00$ $37,260 $74,520 $18,630 $37,260 $18,630
Soil Amendments (Seed bed preparation / soil amendments)55 Acre @ 8,000.00$ =439,200.00$ $87,840 $175,680 $43,920 $87,840 $43,920
Tree Mass Planting 390,000 Sq. Ft.@ 1.25$ =487,500.00$ $195,000 $195,000 $97,500
Understory Mass Plantings 109,500 Sq. Ft.@ 1.50$ =164,250.00$ $65,700 $65,700 $32,850
Page 2 of 3
BUNDLE A BUNDLE B BUNDLE C BUNDLE D BUNDLE E
132 133
Thomas Marcuccilli General Site Work Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4 Phase 5ItemExt.Description Qty.Unit @ Unit Cost =Base Cost Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget PB2 Pedestrian Boardwalk - Elevated & Flat, incl. overlooks, benches 51,500 Sq. Ft.@ 65.00$ =3,347,500.00$ $167,375 $669,500 $1,673,750 $836,875PB2aPedestrian Boardwalk Railing (Required)9,300 LF @ 75.00$ =697,500.00$ $34,875 $139,500 $348,750 $174,375 Pedestrian Boardwalk Path - At grade and flat, bumper rail required 81,950 Sq. Ft.@ 55.00$ =4,507,250.00$ $225,363 $2,028,263 $2,253,625PB4Vehicular Boardwalk - Structural H-20 Std.5,225 Sq. Ft.@ 250.00$ =1,306,250.00$ $1,306,250VB1Vehicular Bridge No. 1 (Steel Truss / Wood Decking / Railing)800 Sq. Ft.@ 160.00$ =128,000.00$ $128,000VB2Vehicular Bridge No. 2 (Steel Truss / Wood Decking / Railing)2,640 Sq. Ft.@ 190.00$ =501,600.00$ $501,600VB3Vehicular Bridge No. 3 (Steel Truss / Wood Decking / Railing)800 Sq. Ft.@ 160.00$ =128,000.00$ $128,000Restroom 'B' - Hopewell Plaza 1 Allow @ 90,000.00$ =90,000.00$ $90,000Restroom 'C' - Harvest Church 1 Allow @ 350,000.00$ =350,000.00$ $350,000
Subtotal 14,247,350.00$
Site Furnishings / Specialty Items
D-1 Sculpture / Public Art 1 Allow @ 150,000.00$ =150,000.00$ $75,000 $75,000
D-2 Sculpture / Public Art 1 Allow @ 250,000.00$ =250,000.00$ $125,000 $125,000
E-1 Passive Play Area 2,825 Each @ 15.00$ =42,375.00$ $21,188 $21,188
E-2 Passive Play Area Each @
H-1 Cargo Netting Area 835 Sq. Ft.@ 25.00$ =20,875.00$ $10,438 $10,438
H-2 Cargo Netting Area 3,100 Sq. Ft.@ 25.00$ =77,500.00$ $38,750 $38,750
I-1 Interactive Boulder Play Area 13,100 Sq. Ft.@ 20.00$ =262,000.00$ $262,000
I-2 Interactive Boulder Play Area 2,250 Each @ 20.00$ =45,000.00$ $22,500 $22,500
J-1 Terraced Seating 2,500 F.F.@ 45.00$ =112,500.00$ $56,250 $56,250
Signage 1 Allow @ 250,000.00$ =250,000.00$ $125,000 $125,000
Subtotal 1,210,250.00$
Landscaping
Prairie/Meadow Planting 13.5 Acre @ 4,500.00$ =60,750.00$ $12,150 $24,300 $6,075 $12,150 $6,075
Wetland/Fen Planting 41.4 Acre @ 4,500.00$ =186,300.00$ $37,260 $74,520 $18,630 $37,260 $18,630
Soil Amendments (Seed bed preparation / soil amendments)55 Acre @ 8,000.00$ =439,200.00$ $87,840 $175,680 $43,920 $87,840 $43,920
Tree Mass Planting 390,000 Sq. Ft.@ 1.25$ =487,500.00$ $195,000 $195,000 $97,500
Understory Mass Plantings 109,500 Sq. Ft.@ 1.50$ =164,250.00$ $65,700 $65,700 $32,850
Page 2 of 3
Thomas Marcuccilli General Site Work Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4 Phase 5
Item Ext.Description Qty.Unit @ Unit Cost =Base Cost Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget
Subtotal 1,338,000.00$
COST SUMMARY
Hard Cost
Total 20,076,293.75$ $3,504,713 $4,335,113 $4,205,396 $4,510,890 $3,520,183
Soft Cost
25% Construction Contingency 5,019,073.44$ $876,178 $1,083,778 $1,051,349 $1,127,723 $880,046
10% Design Contingency 2,007,629.38$ $602,289 $401,526 $401,526 $301,144 $301,144
5% General Requirments 1,003,814.69$ $175,236 $216,756 $210,270 $225,545 $176,009
Total Probable Construction Cost 28,106,811.25$ $5,158,415 $6,037,172 $5,868,541 $6,165,301 $4,877,382
General Notes
UNIT PRICE VALUES DERIVED FROM RECENT PREVAILING WAGE BID PRICING AND THE DESIGN TEAMS ASSUMPTION OF WORK EFFORT REQUIRED. THE DESIGN TEAM HAS NO CONTROL OVER THE COST OF LABOR, MATERIALS, OR THE CONTRACTORS METHODS OF DETERMINING BID PRICES, OR OVER COMPETITIVE BIDDING OR MARKET CONDITIONS. THEREFORE, THE DESIGN TEAM CANNOT GUARANTEE THAT BIDS OR
CONSTRUCTION COST WILL NOT VARY FROM ANY ESTIMATES OF PROBABLE CONSTRUCTION COST PREPARED BY THEM.
COST ASSOCIATED WITH ANY ARCHEOLOGY FINDS, DELAYS IN CONSTRUCTION OR NEED FOR HISTORICAL PRESERVATION HAVE NOT BEEN INCLUDED.
DESIGN DEVELOPMENT FEES AND FEATURES INCLUDING TRIBAL ENGAGEMENT REQUIRES EXTENSIVE RESEARCH AND COORDINATION WITH
Page 3 of 3
Opinion of Probable Cost Estimate - PhasingPrepared by: MKSK Studios 200 South Meridian Street, Indianapolis, IN 46225(Based on MP plan set dated Aug. xx, 2022)
Date:Revised:
Calculated By:DJ Revised:
Checked By:CM Revised:
Project:Thomas Marcuccilli Master Plan File No.:n21217
Thomas Marcuccilli General Site Work Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4 Phase 5
Item Ext.Description Qty.Unit @ Unit Cost =Base Cost Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget Est. Budget
Earthwork
Site Clearing and Prep, Noxious Tree Removal, etc.1 Allow @ 50,000.00$ =50,000.00$ $10,000 $20,000 $10,000 $10,000
Erosion Control 1 Allow @ 50,000.00$ =50,000.00$ $10,000 $10,000 $10,000 $10,000 $10,000
Subtotal 100,000.00$
Pavements
AG-1 Crushed Aggregate Path - H-20: Vehicular Duty / Geotextile Fabric 42,800 Sq. Ft.@ 20.00$ =856,000.00$ $856,000
AS-1 Asphalt Paving Trail - Pedestrian (3" + 6")1,300 Sq. Yd.@ 65.00$ =84,500.00$ $84,500
CP-1 Concrete Pavement (Pedestrian)22,430 Sq. Ft.@ 8.00$ =179,440.00$ $179,440
CP-3 Concrete Pavement (Specialty - Architectural)3,250 Sq. Ft.@ 9.50$ =30,875.00$ $30,875
MT-1 Mulched Trails (Wooded Area)25,500 Sq. Ft.@ 7.00$ =178,500.00$ $178,500
Subtotal 1,329,315.00$
Parking Areas
Community Drive
Simplicity Parkway $126,975
Hopewell Parkway $35,134
Harvest Church Expansion $1,689,270
Subtotal 1,851,378.75$
Site Structures
PB1 Pedestrian Boardwalk - Typ. Elevated incl. ramps, overlooks, benches 27,850 Sq. Ft.@ 75.00$ =2,088,750.00$ $1,566,563 $522,188
PB1a Pedestrian Boardwalk Railing (Required)4,900 LF @ 225.00$ =1,102,500.00$ $826,875 $275,625
Page 1 of 3
BUNDLE A BUNDLE B BUNDLE C BUNDLE D BUNDLE E
134 135
STORM EVENT MANAGEMENT •Create detour or closure around storm affected area for public safety
•Remove obstructions from trails and open space
•Inspect and clear out drains, outflows, ditches, and bioswales
•Alert public of closure
LAWN MAINTENANCE •Inspect and remove trash, pet waste, and debris
•Mow, blow, and trim
•Fertilize
•Edging
•Pest control
TREE MAINTENANCE •Inspect, identify, and remove hazardous trees and limbs
•Prune tree limbs or remove trees that impede user areas
•Water new plantings
•Install and maintain tree protectors for new plantings
WASTE REMOVAL •Litter pick-up in wooded or natural areas
•Empty pet waste stations, change liner
•Restock pet waste bags in dispenser
TRAIL MAINTENANCE •Add surfacing material (mulch)
•Clear branches
•Repair washouts
•Trim back vegetation corridor
•Inspect for overhead hazards
•Inspect for surface hazards
•Use vegetation control in and along surfacing
SIGN MAINTENANCE •Clean surfaces
•Inspect for quality standards
•Straighten
•Vegetation control to maintain visibility
WILDLIFE/NUISANCE PEST CONTROL •Remove roadkill from trails
VANDALISM & GRAFFITI REMOVAL •Inspect/check for vandalism and graffiti
•Call CPD to report vandalism/graffiti
•Remove graffiti
•Clean up after vandalism
BEFORE DEVELOPMENT
SNOW & ICE EVENT MANAGEMENT •Salt and plow parking lots, driveways, and greenways according to snow and ice management plan
•Salt, shovel, and snow blow sidewalks handicap parking areas and other pedestrian access areas
LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE •Inspect and remove trash, pet waste, and debris
•Inspect and report any dead or dying plants, pests, and weeds to landscape contractor
•Spring clean up
•Mulching and bed maintenance
•Fall clean up
•Pre-emergent
•Edging
•Pruning shrubs
•Pruning trees
•Perennial cutbacks
•Perennial flower dead head
•Leaf removal
ASPHALT SURFACES & PARKING LOTS •Inspect and clean drains
•Sweep
•Asphalt striping and painting
•Repair/replace curb stops
•Fill potholes with cold patch
•Asphalt repairs
•Crack fill as needed
•Sealcoat
•Replacement – milling and overlays
•Debris removal
•Vegetation trimming
•Maintain gravel berm edge (if necessary)
•Vegetation control in cracks and edges
CONCRETE SURFACES •Inspect and identify uneven surfaces
•Correct uneven surfaces by grinding or replacement
•Remove debris
•Remove graffiti
•Vegetation control in cracks and edges
•Epoxy fill or caulk cracks as needed
FIXTURE, FURNITURE, EQUIPMENT, &
OUTDOOR LIGHTING
•Clean surfaces (environmental waste, food waste, trash, etc.)
•Apply protection to wood surfaces
•Inspect for proper function
•Winterize and energize water fountains
RESTROOM FACILITIES •Turn on heater, confirm operational, and check for system failures
•Recaulk toilets and sinks
•Paint interior walls and doors
•Replace lightbulbs
•Annual backflow testing
•Flush water heater
•Inspect locks, light, toilets, urinals, sinks, hand dryers, and soap dispensers for proper function
•Roof replacement
•Paint exterior structural posts, walls, etc.
•Power wash floors and foundation
•Clean out vents
AFTER DEVELOPMENT
Pro Forma
136 137
TRAIL SYSTEM FORM PATH TYPOLOGIES LEGEND (FIGURE 44)
Trail System
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK MASTER PLAN
2022 1011
Public Restrooms
Pedestrian Trails
Service / Emergency Drive
Sculpture / Public Art Feature
Passive Play Space
Wetlands
Overlooks
Cargo Netting Feature
Interactive Boulder Outcropping
Terraced Seating
Parking
0’100’200’300’
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI SITE MASTER PLAN
CARMEL CLAY PARKS AND RECREATION
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK
Date 2022 0729
River
R
o
a
d
River
R
o
a
d
Cherry Creek BlvdCherry Creek BlvdCommunity DriveCommunity DriveSimplicity PkwySimplicity PkwyHopewell PkwyHopewell Pkwy E 146E 146th th StreetStreet Beallsville DrBeallsville Drbarker Drbarker Drde
l
m
o
n
t
B
l
v
d
de
l
m
o
n
t
B
l
v
d
(Harvest Church
Expansion)
(Potential Event
Location)
White River
Existing Commercial
Harvest Church
(Future Development)
Conner Prairie
A
F
B
G
C
H
D
I
E
J
K
K
K
K
A
A
A
B
B
B
C
D
D
E
F
F
F
F
G
G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
Public Restrooms
Pedestrian Trails
Service / Emergency Drive
Sculpture / Public Art Feature
Passive Play Space
Wetlands
Overlooks
Cargo Netting Feature
Interactive Boulder Outcropping
Terraced Seating
Parking
0’100’200’300’
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI SITE MASTER PLAN
CARMEL CLAY PARKS AND RECREATION
THOMAS MARCUCCILLI NATURE PARK
Date 2022 0729
River
R
o
a
d
River
R
o
a
d
Cherry Creek BlvdCherry Creek BlvdCommunity DriveCommunity DriveSimplicity PkwySimplicity PkwyHopewell PkwyHopewell Pkwy E 146E 146th th StreetStreet Beallsville DrBeallsville Drbarker Drbarker Drdelmont Blvddelmont Blvd
(Harvest Church
Expansion)
(Potential Event
Location)
White River
Existing CommercialHarvest Church
(Future Development)
Conner Prairie
A
F
B
G
C
H
D
I
E
J
K
K
K
K
A
A
A
B
B
B
C
D
D
E
F
F
F
F
G G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
WoodlotCommunity driveCommunity driveSimpliCity parkwaySimpliCity parkway
antiquity driveantiquity drive
Grove at The Grove at The
LegacyLegacy
Preferred Concept: Park Entry and Trailhead at Community Drive - Restroom Omitted
138 139
140 141
Loop Distance: .6 miles
TRAIL LOOP A
This loop comprises the entirety of the western half of the site and would
educate visitors about the ecological history of the site and the fragility of the
landscape. This loop also allows for users to experience the Well Overlook
provided by Carmel Utilities. Interaction with the Central Ridge/Interpretation
Zone would occur as well.
Loop Distance: .85 miles
TRAIL LOOP B
Trail Loop C represents the a portion of the elevated boardwalk experience off
of 146th Street. It allows visitors to briefly enter the site and experience Thomas
Marcuccilli Nature Park from a distance. This loop would also allow for access to
the commercial node to the northeast.
Loop Distance: .33 miles
TRAIL LOOP C
Similar to Loop B, this loop circulates around the eastern depression of the site
and will consist of both, shorter boardwalks as well as the elevated boardwalk.
This loop will offer education pertaining to the Native American Interpretation
and history as well as education about progressive land management.
Loop Distance: .9 miles
TRAIL LOOP D
Trail Loop E is the longest experience available that would offer an experience
from each zone of the nature park. Almost all of the ecological zones are
available with this experience as well as each of the proposed elements.
Loop Distance: 1.3 miles
TRAIL LOOP E