Metroparks Toledo | |
---|---|
Type | Public park district |
Motto | Get Outside Yourself[1] |
Location | Lucas County, Ohio, United States |
Area | 12,700 acres (5,100 ha)[2] |
Created | 1928[3] |
Operated by | Board of Park Commissioners of the Metropolitan Park District of the Toledo Area |
Visitors | 6 million (2021)[2] |
Open | Year-round, 7 a.m. until dark daily[4] |
Budget | $20.4 million (2022)[5] |
Website | metroparkstoledo.com |
Metroparks Toledo, officially the Metropolitan Park District of the Toledo Area, is a public park district consisting of parks, nature preserves, a botanical garden, trail network and historic battlefield in Lucas County, Ohio.[6]
Founded during the Great Depression and initially built using labor from federal New Deal programs,[7][8] the present park district includes 12,700 acres (5,100 ha) across 19 metroparks and nearly 200 miles (320 km) of trails throughout the Toledo area.[6]
The largest park, Oak Openings Preserve Metropark, is a centerpiece of the Oak Openings Region and features ecologically significant oak savanna landscapes and globally rare plant communities.[9] Pearson Metropark contains one of the last remaining stands of the Great Black Swamp.[10]
The district includes historically and culturally significant sites, including the Fallen Timbers Battlefield, surviving Miami and Erie Canal infrastructure at Side Cut and Providence Metroparks, and a variety of shelters and buildings built by the federal Works Progress Administration and Civilian Conservation Corps.[11][12] Wildwood Preserve Metropark features one of the last remaining public, free-admission gardens designed by Ellen Biddle Shipman at the former manor house estate of Champion spark plug magnate Robert Stranahan.[13]
2015 Annual Report
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).