{"id":7,"date":"2017-01-23T23:28:41","date_gmt":"2017-01-24T04:28:41","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/glenprovidencepark.org\/?page_id=7"},"modified":"2023-06-17T14:48:30","modified_gmt":"2023-06-17T18:48:30","slug":"3rd-street-bridge-dam","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/glenprovidencepark.org\/3rd-street-bridge-dam\/","title":{"rendered":"3rd St. Project"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"<\/a>Broomall’s Dam background<\/h3>\n

The dam across Broomall’s Run was built in 1883 to create Broomall’s Lake for the purpose of harvesting ice, and was later used for recreational swimming and boating. In 1980, the structure was in need of reconstruction, and the Army Corps of Engineers declared it unsafe. In 1996, Media Borough closed the roadway over the dam due erosion on the south side of the dam and road. In 2017, due to the continued unsafe condition of the structure, the dam was partially removed by the PA Department of Environmental Protection (PA DEP).  <\/p>\n

For a more detailed history of the project, read our History of 3rd Street Bridge\/Dam<\/a>.<\/p>\n

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2023 Update: Conservation Easement and Pedestrian-Bicycle Bridge<\/h3>\n

In February of 2023, Delaware County Council announced that they had arranged a conservation easement agreement<\/a> with Broomall’s Lake Country Club, preserving four acres of the swim club’s property closest to the county’s Glen Providence Park. This agreement nullifies the 2016 stipulation and eliminates the legal knot that required an unnecessary high-hazard dam.<\/p>\n

In June of 2023, Media Borough Council announced that they were revising designs for the Third Street Bridge to be exclusively for pedestrians and bicycles<\/a>, a solution Friends of Glen Providence Park has supported for years as the most environmentally-sensitive connection between Media and Upper Providence.<\/p>\n

A new dam would damage the park<\/h3>\n

A portion of Glen Providence Park is under threat from the planned reconstruction of Broomall’s Dam. The current design and construction would damage 1.1 acres of the park<\/a> where there is currently waterfalls, wetlands, and mature trees, replacing them with earthfill and a grassy slope for the new, larger dam. No trees, or anything other than closely mowed grass, would be permitted on the slope. The design would also reopen the bridge to automotive traffic, compromising an area that has evolved into a peaceful pedestrian walkway through the natural areas surrounding Broomall’s Lake and Glen Providence Park.<\/p>\n

Friends of Glen Providence Park<\/a> is seeking to positively influence the design of the project in order to minimize damage to the park and to prioritize the needs of pedestrians and cyclists. We encourage maximum public participation in the design and decision-making process. We have, in earlier phases of the project, created a petition<\/a>, and supported dam removal<\/a> and a pedestrian and bicycle greenway<\/a>.
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The evolving legal status<\/h3>\n

In May 2011, Media Borough Council signed a three-party stipulation agreement<\/a> with Delaware County and Broomall\u2019s Lake Country Club (BLCC) to build a new dam \u2013 indicating that the Borough had responsibility for funding and managing the construction of the dam, and BLCC and the County would share the long-term responsibility and the costs of future maintenance. Ownership of the proposed new dam was NOT established by the stipulation agreement.<\/strong><\/p>\n

After a year of active advocacy by our organization and others at public meetings, in May 2012, Media Borough Council voted to move forward with dam reconstruction, despite clear public support for dam removal. In September 2012, Council voted on a compromise design for the dam with a one-way road, from Upper Providence into Media.  We decided to support this compromise resolution for reasons explained in our Letter to the Editor<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Since that time, there have been further developments:<\/strong><\/p>\n