Fair Park

This article is about the park in Dallas. For other uses, see Fair Park (disambiguation).
Texas Centennial Exposition Buildings (1936--1937)

The Centennial Building in Fair Park
Location Bounded by Texas and Pacific RR, Pennsylvania, Second, and Parry Aves
Dallas
Coordinates 32°46′55″N 96°45′56″W / 32.78194°N 96.76556°W / 32.78194; -96.76556Coordinates: 32°46′55″N 96°45′56″W / 32.78194°N 96.76556°W / 32.78194; -96.76556
Area 277 acres (1.12 km2)[1]
Built 1936
Architect Dahl, George L.; Et al.
Architectural style Art Deco
NRHP Reference # 86003488
Significant dates
Added to NRHP September 24, 1986[2]
Designated NHL September 24, 1986[3]

Fair Park is a 277-acre (1.12 km2) recreational and educational complex located in Dallas, Texas (United States). The area, which is immediately southeast of downtown Dallas, is registered as a Dallas Landmark and National Historic Landmark. Many of the buildings were constructed for the Texas Centennial Exposition in 1936.

Fair Park has been designated a Great Place in America by the American Planning Association.

History

The site was established as an 80-acre fairground on the outskirts of East Dallas for the Dallas State Fair in 1886. In 1904, after a fire and financial loss by the fair association, voters approved the "Reardon Plan,".[4] It became Dallas' second public park and became known as "Fair Park."

An important figure in Fair Park's development was landscape architect and city planner George Kessler. In 1906, he was responsible for the first formal plan for the park influenced by the City Beautiful Movement. The City Beautiful Movement advocated well planned public spaces, tree-lined boulevards, monuments, public art, and fountains which would ‘beautify’ the city.

A milestone in Fair Park's history was 1936, when the Texas Centennial Exposition was held there. In preparation for the six-month event, the appearance of the park was dramatically altered by architect George Dahl and consulting architect Paul Cret. The park was transformed from an early 20th-century fairground into an Art Deco showcase. While many of the exposition's buildings were meant to be temporary, several have survived and have been restored to some extent. Over the years the park was expanded to its current 277 acres.

Fair Park was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1986[1][3] and in 1988 administration of the park was transferred to the Dallas Parks Department. Today, the cultural facilities and annual events attract an unsubstantiated estimate of 5 million visitors annually, the bulk of which attend during the 24-day State Fair of Texas.[5]

Restoration and future

Many of the existing art deco buildings have been restored visually to their 1936 appearance and upgraded to modern building standards. In anticipation of DART's light rail service the historic Parry Avenue entrance gates were restored in 2009. The four cameo reliefs on Centennial Building underwent a professional conservation treatment in 2000 and the Esplanade fountain pylons and six monumental sculptures in 2004.[6] Several sculptures were reconstructed and feature a dramatic light and water show.

In 2003, the Fair Park Comprehensive Development plan was produced by Hargreaves Associates. This comprehensive plan included recommendations for the physical site, park programs, activities, funding options, and management alternatives.[7] The park received a $72 million city bond allocation in 2006 for repairs and improvements.[8]

In September 2014, a blue ribbon task force appointed by Mayor Mike Rawlings submitted a report on the rejuvenation of Fair Park.[9] The Mayor's Task Force plan envisions a public-private partnership led by a non profit organization to be charged with over arching powers to control the revitalization of Fair Park, including the State Fair of Texas.[10] Architect/City planner Antonio Di Mambro, with international experience in infrastructure planning and neighborhood revitalization, encouraged the Mayor to use the Task Force report as a building block for constructive dialogue with residents, stakeholders and the neighborhoods around Fair Park.[11] Following the presentation of the Task Force Plan, Mayor Mike Rawlings said, "I felt passion by all the council and park board members that they want Fair Park to be all it can be and they're interested in taking this big challenge on".[12]

In March 2015, the State Fair pushed back on any notion of tightening up the footprint of its current operation. Dallas Morning News reporter Robert Wilonsky called the State Fair's response "rather dramatic" The article also quoted Stephen Page of the closed Texas Museum of Automotive History from 2012 as saying, "The City's requirement that tenants vacate the majority of the buildings in Fair Park during the State Fair is the principal reason for Fair Park's ongoing decline." Wilonsky also quoted a ‘prominent member of the Mayor's Task Force’ as suggesting privately "that the State Fair's presence at Fair Park also needs to be greatly reduced."[13]

On November 18, 2015 Dallas City Council considered Mayor Mike Rawlings' proposal to turn over management of a blighted Fair Park to a non-profit corporation headed up by the "Father of DART" Walt Humann. Under the Mayor's plan, the city would still own the 277-acre site, but a non-profit foundation would manage the grounds and assets.[14]

Cultural district

Many Dallas cultural institutions call Fair Park home.

The Leonhardt Lagoon
The Cotton Bowl
African American Museum
Music Hall at Fair Park
Hall of State
Main article: Hall of State

The Hall of State is managed by the Dallas Historical Society, which hosts exhibits inside about Dallas history and culture.

Old Mill Inn

The Old Mill Inn was one of the few Texas Centennial Exposition buildings not to incorporate Art Deco styling. Clad in fieldstone with heavy-timber construction, this was the exhibit building for the flour milling industry. It now sporadically serves Fair Park as a restaurant.[15]

Magnolia Lounge and (former) Hall of Religion

This little-known project by New York architect William Lescaze introduced European Modernism to Texas in 1936. The design of this hospitality lounge for the Magnolia Petroleum Company included elements commonly found in Art Deco architecture. However, the building's overall image was radically different from that of any other structure at the Texas Centennial Exposition.

Site of Theatre '47, the first professional, regional theater company in the United States, the small performing space pays tribute to the visionary founder of America's regional theater movement. Immediately adjacent to the Magnolia Lounge is the former Hall of Religion.

African American Museum

The current museum building occupies virtually the same site as the Texas Centennial Exposition's Hall of Negro Life. It boasts a permanent collection that consists of the works of such highly regarded African American artists as Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, Larry D. Alexander, John T. Biggers, Clementine Hunter, Benny Andrews, Edward Mitchell Bannister and Arthello Beck[15][16]

The Leonhardt Lagoon

South of the Midway, George Dahl arranged Dallas's future cultural institutions informally around a tranquil lagoon, offering Texas Centennial exposition visitors a peaceful, naturalistic counterpoint to the activity of the exposition.

In 1981, Patricia Johanson was commissioned to redesign and restore the badly degraded lagoon. Since reopening in 1986, the redesigned lagoon has become recognized as a major earth sculpture and one of the earliest examples of art as bioremediation.[15]

Museum of Nature and Science

The Museum of Nature & Science occupied two buildings around the lagoon (one named "The Science Place"[17]), and a planetarium next to the WRR building, before moving most of its operations to the new Perot campus at Victory Park in December 2012. The former History Building remains open on weekends as a secondary campus of the Perot Museum.[18] The IMAX theatre and planetarium at the Fair Park campus are shuttered.[17]

The History Building, once the Museum of Natural History, was designed for the Texas Centennial Exposition as a monolithic, rectangular box. The entrance features three vertical window bays with decorative aluminum mullions. Flanking it are paired pilasters with shell-motif capitals. The rest of the building is clad in limestone. In 1988, the northeast corner of the building was excavated, creating a series of landscaped terraces.

Fair Park Band Shell

The concentric plaster arches of the Band Shell comprise an essentially Art Deco composition. Elements of the Streamline Moderne style are present in the reinforced concrete backstage building. Lighting pylons surround the sloping 5,000-seat amphitheater.[15]

Texas Discovery Gardens

This was the original Horticulture Building for the Texas Centennial Exposition. It has since been altered by exterior renovations and additions, including the minimalist glass Blachly Conservatory. In the gardens behind the main structure is a model home that the Portland Cement Company originally built for the Exposition.[15]

Cotton Bowl
Main article: Cotton Bowl (stadium)

The Cotton Bowl stadium was built in 1932 below-grade and was originally known as the Fair Park Bowl. Subsequent expansions resulted in a present capacity of 92,200. The Cotton Bowl Classic was played there from 1937–2009. Annually during the State Fair of Texas, it hosts the AT&T Red River Rivalry game between the University of Texas and the University of Oklahoma along with the Southwest Airlines State Fair Classic game between Grambling State University (Louisiana) and Prairie View A&M University. It was also home to the Dallas Cowboys from 1960 to 1971 until their move to Texas Stadium in Irving.

Music Hall at Fair Park

Music Hall, built in Spanish colonial revival style, was the General Motors Building during the Centennial Exposition. It underwent extensive remodeling in 1972. It was home of the Dallas Opera until 2009 and is the current home for Dallas Summer Musicals.[15]

Midway and other structures

Texas State Vietnam Memorial

Annual events

Other notable events

Dallas Grand Prix Circuit
Location Fair Park, Dallas
Time zone GMT -6
Major events 1984 Dallas Grand Prix
Length 2.424 mi (3.901 km)
Turns 14
Lap record 1:45.353, 133.300 km/h (Austria Niki Lauda, McLaren, 1984)

Transportation

Education

Irma Rangel Young Women's Leadership School is located in Fair Park.[29]

References

  1. 1 2 Stephen G. Snyder and James H. Charleton (December 24, 1985). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Texas Centennial Exposition Buildings (1936-37) / Fair Park (Site of Texas State Fairs 1886-date" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-06-26. and Accompanying 19 photos, from 1985 (4.10 MB)
  2. National Park Service (2008-04-15). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  3. 1 2 "Fair Park Texas Centennial Buildings". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
  4. http://www.watermelon-kid.com/places/FairPark/fp-history/history-intro.htm
  5. http://www.chiefads.com/import/texas-fair-downplays-attendance/article_fd381d4f-cd48-5a23-8edc-eb22544f742d.html
  6. http://www.aegisrestauro.com
  7. https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/qwertypoiuy/Jan/Fair+Park+Comprehensive+Plan+2003.pdf
  8. "American Planning Association". Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  9. http://www.dallasnews.com/news/metro/20140903-dallas-council-enthusiastic-about-proposal-to-privatize-fair-park.ece
  10. http://fairpark.org/pdfs/mayors-task-force-report.pdf
  11. http://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/latest-columns/20140909-include-edges-in-fair-park-revitalization.ece
  12. http://www.nbcdfw.com/entertainment/the-scene/Dallas-Leaders-Praise-New-Fair-Park-Plan-273857481.html
  13. http://www.dallasnews.com/news/metro/20150326-plan-to-reduce-state-fair-space-would-end-its-run-official-says.ece
  14. http://keranews.org/post/newsroom-fair-park-s-future-making-dallas-smart-city
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 http://www.fairpark.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=185 Friends of Fair Park
  16. http://www.aamdallas.org/ African American Museum
  17. 1 2 Perot Museum website on Fair Park
  18. http://www.perotmuseum.org/visit-the-museum/fairpark-victorypark.html
  19. http://www.dmagazine.com/publications/d-magazine/1988/december/outdoor-theater-from-hell
  20. http://www.fairpark.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=217
  21. http://bigtex.ntelligentsystems.com/ns/PressRelease/ViewPressRelease.asp?PRelId=324
  22. http://www.dfwandbeyond.com/destinations/summer-adventures-in-fair-park
  23. http://amusementtoday.com/backissues/at_august_2012_web.pdf
  24. 1 2 http://www.dallasnews.com/news/community-news/white-rock-east-dallas/headlines/20140218-there-wont-be-summer-adventures-in-fair-park-this-year.ece
  25. http://www.fairpark.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=216
  26. Schutze, Jim (2014-02-21). "Fair Park's Summer Amusement Venture Is Dead. Is Anyone Surprised?". Retrieved 2016-08-31.
  27. http://earthdaytx.org/about
  28. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/092309dnmetfairsafety.1a61a692d.html
  29. "Our Schools." Foundation for the Education of Young Women. Retrieved on May 23, 2011. "The school is located in Fair Park at 1718 Robert B. Cullum Boulevard."
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fair Park.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.