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LSU Lakes Renovation to Begin July 2023

Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:28 pm
Posted by GeorgeReymond
Buckhead
Member since Jan 2013
10157 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:28 pm
225 Article

quote:

Pass by the University Lakes this week, and you’ll spot clues that Phase 1 of its long-awaited improvement project is about to begin. Many years in the making, the project received the final greenlight from the Army Corps of Engineers on June 6 and will start in earnest in early July, officials say.

Intended to improve the University Lakes system, the project includes dredging and deepening the lakes to amend their flow and water quality, and adding pedestrian paths and other enhancements to improve the user experience.

This week, residents will see contractors start staging equipment in May Street Park for Phase 1, which includes dredging City Park Lake and the small lake on its northeast side, Lake Erie. Expect to spot equipment in the water after July 4, says Mark Goodson, principal with project lead CSRS.

New York-based Sevenson Environmental is performing the dredging, which starts with cleaning up the lake bottom first, Goodson says.

“Specifically, they’ll start with what we call ‘raking’ the lakes, identifying and removing stumps and debris before they come in and dredge,” Goodson says.

Phase 1 also includes connecting the system’s two largest lakes, City Park Lake and University Lake, and making improvements to May Street, which runs between them and will be replaced by a new bridge.

“It includes realigning May Street, and improving the intersections at either end, both at Dalrymple and East Lakeshore to make them safer for vehicles and pedestrians and cyclists,” Goodson says. “It includes new pathways and lighting on either side for pedestrians and cyclists, and it will include a new hydraulic connection between University Lake and City Park Lake.”

Wildlife and recreational users will be able to pass back and forth between both lakes.

The May Street bridge and improvements are still under design. Its construction won’t start until closer to the end of the year, Goodson says.

Another component of Phase 1 includes the installation of a forebay, a hydraulic system for trapping sediment, at the north end of City Park Lake.

“The forebay will trap the sediment that enters the lakes system from Bayou Duplantier before it gets dispersed across the lakes,” Goodson says. “(Sediment buildup) is the main reason that the lakes have become so shallow.”

University Lake will be dredged and improved in Phase 2.

The Phase 1 dredging will increase the depth of the lakes to about 6 feet in most places, and 9 feet near the forebay, Goodson says. Along with sediment buildup, the lakes’ current shallow depth is due to their original identity as a swamp whose Cypress trees were cut down in the 1930s as part of a WPA project.

Baton Rouge has been discussing dredging the lakes to deepen and improve them for decades, but the project has been seen as expensive and complicated due in part to the many remaining stumps and large amount of debris on the lake bottom.

Phase 1 is budgeted at $32 million.



This post was edited on 6/29/23 at 1:30 pm
Posted by GeorgeReymond
Buckhead
Member since Jan 2013
10157 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:28 pm to
Posted by jlovel7
Louisiana
Member since Aug 2014
21305 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:32 pm to
at those renderings. As if it will ever look that good.
Posted by Loup
Ferriday
Member since Apr 2019
11253 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:35 pm to
not enough litter in the renderings
Posted by Topwater Trout
Red Stick
Member since Oct 2010
67589 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:40 pm to
Lake erie...never knew it had a name. I sure thought it would be bigger
Posted by 777Tiger
Member since Mar 2011
73856 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:43 pm to
quote:

Lake erie...never knew it had a name. I sure thought it would be bigger



I guess the Edmund Fitzgerald wasn't as big as the song made it out to be
Posted by lsu for the win
Member since Jun 2022
810 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:50 pm to
Where we gonna put the bodies and drug needles now?
This post was edited on 6/29/23 at 1:51 pm
Posted by Pledge
Professional Baw
Member since Sep 2015
1115 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:51 pm to
Wonder how many bodies they'll find
Posted by LSU Patrick
Member since Jan 2009
73476 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:52 pm to
quote:

Wonder how many bodies they'll find


There have to still be a few of Derick Todd Lee's in there.

Posted by Eighteen
Member since Dec 2006
33873 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 1:53 pm to
All those lake front homes finally swung their dick around (thanks Coach Kelly!)
Posted by Amadeo
Member since Jan 2004
4811 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 2:02 pm to

Except for all the algae in the lakes, this is one of the coolest angles I've ever seen Baton Rouge photographed.
Posted by Tony The Tiger
The Woodlands, TX
Member since Sep 2003
2589 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 2:07 pm to
Looking at the depth map, is this the current lake depths, or what they will be?
Posted by secfballfan
Member since Feb 2016
2901 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 2:09 pm to
Wonder if anyone will be offering submarine trips to check out the bottom?
Posted by sec13rowBBseat28
St George, LA
Member since Aug 2006
15376 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 2:12 pm to
Phase 1 got reduced down to just City Park Lake and Lake Erie. There’s no telling when they are going to do all of the other lakes by LSU.

They’re mobilizing now.
This post was edited on 6/29/23 at 2:13 pm
Posted by HoustonGumbeauxGuy
Member since Jul 2011
29499 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 2:13 pm to
They better have 911 blue light phones every 50 feet

Posted by LSUSkip
Central, LA
Member since Jul 2012
17539 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 2:42 pm to
I'm just happy something around here is getting improved. There's so much to love about this city, unfortunately, there's so much to loathe about this city.
Posted by jp4lsu
Member since Sep 2016
4964 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 2:47 pm to
when I went there 23 yrs ago, I never saw algae like that. what changed? just got shallower and hotter?
Posted by Circle G84
Member since Nov 2022
640 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 3:07 pm to
I did an internship at my job at City Park golf course where I was cutting greens and whatnot in 2009, concerning the health of the lakes for my disaster science management class while at LSU. I remember citing their need to be dredged way back then due due to their hypoxic state.


I'm excited they are finally doing this and I hope the outcome pays dividends aesthetically and for the overall health of the lakes.
This post was edited on 6/29/23 at 3:08 pm
Posted by WildTchoupitoulas
Member since Jan 2010
44071 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 3:32 pm to
Just a couple of points:

They're going to have to reduce the nitrogen entering the system from the golf course and any leaking sewerage to reduce algal blooms.

The pedestrian paths seen on the first rendering near #7 and across Crest Lake between McKinley High and #2 are going to be problematic due to local concerns.

This doesn't seem to make any geographic sense:

quote:

Another component of Phase 1 includes the installation of a forebay, a hydraulic system for trapping sediment, at the north end of City Park Lake.

“The forebay will trap the sediment that enters the lakes system from Bayou Duplantier before it gets dispersed across the lakes,” Goodson says.
Posted by BobABooey
Parts Unknown
Member since Oct 2004
14257 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 3:32 pm to
They dredged a portion of University Lake in the mid-1980’s. They started at the end by the Phi Mu sorority house and dredged until they ran out of money. The project stopped near the Systems Building (is it still called that?) so maybe 1/3 of the one lake. The dredged materials were used to build BR Beach and that peninsula that is now called Bird Sanctuary or whatever.
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