ODOT PARTNERS WITH PAULDING COUNTY PARKS DISTRICT ON PROPERTY TRANSFER
Former roadside rest area becomes Paulding County park
 A monument stands at the former roadside rest area in northern Paulding County, which has been transformed into a park.
LIMA, Ohio (Aug. 1, 2018) - The Ohio
Department of Transportation (ODOT) District 1 real estate team partnered with
the Paulding County Parks District regarding the transfer of the former roadside
rest area located on county Road 424 in New Rochester.
The roadside park,
located just north of the village of Cecil, was previously owned by the state
of Ohio. Following the relocation of U.S. 24, the park was no longer needed. In
efforts to restore the park to its full potential, the Paulding County Parks
District showed its willingness to accept ownership of the property.
Situated along the
southern banks of the Maumee River, New Rochester was founded in 1835 and named
the first county seat, and remained so until the year of 1840. The former
roadside rest area is well known for being a significant historical remnant of
Paulding County.
In 2008, the
former U.S. 24 became county Road 424 when U.S. 24 was relocated and expanded to
a four-lane highway. This project was known to many as the Fort to Port project,
which realigned U.S. 24 from Fort Wayne, Indiana, to Toledo.
“It’s always been a historical site for
Paulding, and in the last five years, the parks district has been very active,
so we got involved in seeing what we could do to get access to the rivers. It
really is a beautiful place and we want to restore and maintain its historical
beauty,” said Linda Hodges, president of the Paulding County Parks
District.
The Paulding
County Parks District is in the process of restoring multiple parks throughout
the county in hopes to take full advantage of the two rivers that run through
the county: the Maumee River and the Auglaize River. The end goal of these
restoration plans is to provide scenic areas for residents and visitors to
swim, fish, boat and picnic and to bring back significance to these historical
places.
“We have very ambitious plans and we are just
getting started,” Hodges added.
There was no cost
to the park district to assume control of the property. ODOT’s only requirement
was that the parks district is to ensure the site continues to provide a public
use and that the environmental resources are protected.
“We both benefit
from this. ODOT no longer has to maintain the site, because it is no longer on
our highway system and we are grateful that the Paulding County Parks District
has so much passion to continue to provide public use of such a historical
site,” said Shell Miller, real estate administrator at ODOT District 1.
The Ohio Department of Transportation maintains the state's largest man-made asset – the transportation system. ODOT's mission is to provide the safe and easy movement of people and goods from place to place. As a $2.8 billion per year enterprise, ODOT invests the bulk of its resources in system preservation through maintenance, construction and snow and ice operations.
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