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Published: Feb 07, 2007 12:30 AM
Modified: Feb 07, 2007 05:11 AM
 

Dix campus grove already a park to many

The Dorothea Dix hospital campus is not a park yet. But don't tell neighbors that.

For years, people who live in the nearby Boylan Heights neighborhood have walked their dogs, thrown around Frisbees and jogged through the eastern corner of the property.

The majestic red oaks and other trees have led many to call this area the Grove.

It is no coincidence that the 315-acre site feels like a park. In the 19th century, the planners of the state's first psychiatric hospital thought that a bucolic setting would calm the nerves of patients.

When Raleigh rerouted Western Boulevard in the 1990s, it straightened the Rocky Branch creek, planted a row of trees and built a bike path alongside it, adding to the parklike feel.

All eight plans drawn up for the Dix site so far recommend leaving this corner undeveloped. That is because the low-lying area floods regularly during storms and the hills are too steep to build on.

Judy Murray, owner of Baja Burrito, takes her dog, Jackson, to the Grove once a day. She said she prefers it to nearby Pullen Park, which does not have as natural a landscape.

"I like that there's grass to walk on and have your dogs run on," she said.

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THE GROVE

SIZE: 25 acres

LOCATION: Eastern section of the campus, along Western Boulevard.

NOTABLE FOR: Being something of a local park already. A bike path runs along Western Boulevard, residents of nearby Boylan Heights walk their dogs here, and the sloping hills used to be a popular sledding spot.

PROPOSED USES: Every plan calls for this land to become a city park. The Rocky Branch creek floods the low areas, and the hills are too steep to be developed easily. One plan also calls for a man-made pond here.

TRIVIA: The octagonal gazebo dates to the 1910s.

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