Coming Soon!
After 3 decades of planning and community engagement, the City of Oakland will soon replace the existing recreation center with a new two-story, 22,221 square-foot recreation and community resilience center. The new center will be bigger and better suited to serve neighborhood and City residents.
-
The new center will provide the community with:
Larger gymnasium for basketball, volleyball and other indoor sports
Flexible multi-purpose rooms for after school and summer programs, cultural arts, teen and adult programming, community meetings, and senior programs
Roof deck and ground-level children's courtyard
Indoor / outdoor community stage
Open lobby for socializing and gallery space
Modern kitchen
Expanded resilience programming strengthening the community’s ability to respond to local disasters and emergencies
Solar panels and battery storage to aid the community in when the power is out
Energy efficient HVAC system that will provide air filtration, cooling, and heating
Increased greenspace, featuring new shade trees and drought-tolerant landscaping to advance sustainable water management goals
New basketball and multi-sport flex courts
New outdoors seating and small courtyards
Public Art and donor recognition installation
-
The new center is designed by Oakland based Shah Kawasaki Architects. You can learn more about the features from the lead architect, Youngchae Lee.
-
The new center will have green building and design features such as a bicycle storage room, rooftop solar panels, and a roof garden. The center will operate on 100 percent electric power, in accordance with the City's All-Electric Construction in Newly Constructed Buildings Code. It will also include energy efficient fixtures and appliances, efficient plumbing, low water use landscaping, and high solar reflective materials.
-
As part of the project, the City will remove ten existing trees and plant approximately 40 new trees. There will be 4,200 square feet of new landscaping area including stormwater treatment planters along the building perimeters and the roof garden area on the second floor. The city will repave the existing sidewalks adjacent to the park boundaries, make improvements to the outdoor light pole fixtures and replace perimeter fencing.