Celebration Pavilion |
What
better way to celebrate being back on two wheels than by hopping on the Swamp
Rabbit Trail for a post-school ride before all the autumn after-school activities kick in? We opted to hop
on at the brand-new Cancer Survivors Park. Located between Falls Park and
Cleveland Park in downtown Greenville, the park had its grand opening on June 1st of this year, and has joined the long list of beautiful parks along the Reedy
River watershed.
There
are three ways to access the 6.8 acre park: Cleveland Street, Church Street,
and the Swamp Rabbit Trail. Despite being so centrally located, it’s a little
hard to get to the park by car – there is no access from Church Street or
University Ridge. However, the parking lot at 43 Cleveland Street provides free
parking, and both Church and Cleveland Street are accessed by ramp, meaning
even the 3 year old could easily get to the SRT on his bicycle.
The Chamber Portal |
Passing
through the gate of blue butterflies, the Celebration of Life Pavilion sculpture
dominates the Cleveland Street side of the park. Cancer Survivors Park Alliance
is planning to install canvas underneath the metal frame, and hope to illuminate
the canvas year round with different colors representing different types of
cancer. The metal sculpture sits atop the Survivorship Education Center, utilized
for programs and activities to “help people learn more about screening,
detection and treatment, as well as how to live beyond cancer.”
A multi-level boulder waterfall next to the Survivorship Center |
The
park is a result of a partnership between public and private parties, the
majority of funding raised through private donations. Not only does it link Falls Park and Cleveland Park, but it is a key piece of the Swamp Rabbit trail, as the
2-foot-wide suspension Spirit Bridge replaced the old ‘cheese grate’ bridge
that formerly crossed the Reedy right before it enters Cleveland Park.
While
portions of the plan have been completed including a labyrinth, a small
amphitheater and the start of the children’s garden, it is obvious that the
project has its work cut out for it; kudzu still dominates the steep sides cutting
up to Church Street and NEXT Innovation Center, and the black sewage pipes
cross the Reedy alongside the beautiful new bridge. However the park is a
valuable addition to the Greenville cityscape, not only as the link between the
two main parks that are at the center of Greenville's identity, but also for the spiritual
aspect; the park has been carefully designed to mirror the various experiences
of cancer – high and low points, areas for gathering and for solitude,
tranquility, and the journey.
Healing Garden |
Cancer
Survivors Park is dedicated not only to those who have survived the disease,
but also those who are battling it, and the survivors left behind by those lost
to cancer. For more information, please visit the Cancer Survivors Park Alliance website.
Fear Not, by Charles Pate, Jr. in the Children's Garden |
Source: Cancer Survivors Park website |
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