Promoting Paradise and Removing a Parking Lot
Marine Discovery Center
For Immediate Release
PROMOTING PARADISE AND REMOVING A PARKING LOT
With an opportunity to reverse decades of paving over paradise to put up a parking lot, the Marine Discovery Center along with community partners and local enthusiasts, has removed 13,000 square feet of impervious pavement, reshaped the shoreline, and is converting the shoreline and several upland parking lot medians into a productive coastal habitat.
Over the next week, the Living Shoreline habitat will begin the planting stage of this project with the assistance of community volunteers. This effort will include over 1,000 trees, shrubs, and grasses. In addition, the Marine Discovery Center will expand its community education programs utilizing the interpretive trail which will be formed and connected to existing parts of the shoreline and will be an extension of the Coast-to-Coast Trail System.
With over ¾ of Florida residents living on or near our coastal ecosystems, estuaries like the Indian River Lagoon are experiencing an overall decline in water quality, including more algal blooms, fish kills, and unusual mortality events. Designated as an estuary of national significance, and touted as North America’s most biologically diverse estuary, the Indian River Lagoon is under threat. If the population in Florida doubles in the next fifty years as predicted, we may witness the loss of almost 6 million acres of land to roads, shopping malls, and subdivisions. The impact of this growth would result in a reduction of ecological services such as water and air filtration, carbon sequestration, and aquifer recharge, while increasing saltwater intrusion into our aquifer, and pollution into our ground and surface waters.
So how do we reduce the environmental and community impact associated with urban sprawl? The Marine Discovery Center looks for opportunities to increase ecological services provided by healthy habitats and engage the New Smyrna Beach community in the process. Expanding on a 5.5-acre salt marsh and mangrove forest restoration project in 2014, the Marine Discovery Center has an opportunity to remove additional impervious surfaces and expand productive upland and Living Shoreline habitat on its 22-acre campus.
In 2011, the Marine Discovery Center moved into an existing building on the site of the old New Smyrna Beach High School. The site accommodated over 2,100 students, faculty, and support staff and had many buildings, parking lots, and other amenities. With a focus on education, conservation, and recreation, the Florida Wildlife Commission, Marine Discovery Center, and other partners began returning the property to its natural state while engaging the community in the importance of protecting and restoring the Indian River Lagoon.
Briefly, projects that have been completed include:
- 2011 - Removal of all buildings (except one), track, tennis courts, racquetball courts, and
sidewalks. - 2014 – Completed a 5.5-acre mangrove and salt marsh habitat restoration and enhancement
project coupled with a Living Shoreline Demonstration area. Community volunteers planted
over 25,000 spartina alterniflora (saltmarsh cordgrass) and other grasses to bring the area back
to life. - 2015 and 2016 - Completed a Butterfly and Native Wildflower Garden as well as a Nature
Playscape area. - 2019 – Completed additional native landscapes, a kayak launch, and an outdoor
amphitheater. - 2023 - Removed antiquated stormwater retention area, installed a larger stormwater detention
area, and continued with more native landscapes and a regional, multi-use trail system and
restrooms.
Adding to the Marine Discovery Center’s 23,500 linear feet of shoreline they have already restored, the creation of this new 300 feet of Living Shoreline and the interpretative trail will include traditional stand-alone signs and smartphone tours using Engage by Cell.
Integrating both traditional and modern technology allows the Center to engage all visitors to the site through active and passive education. With no admission fee and 24-hour access to the shoreline, the project has a broad reach to the public and over 30,000 program and event participants annually.
This program is funded through the Disney Conservation Fund, which has been awarding monies to non-profits since 2014 for water stewardship efforts. In addition, the Marine Discovery Center is working with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, St. Johns River Water Management District, and the City of New Smyrna Beach.
The Marine Discovery Center has posted updates on their progress to social media sites Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn, and to the Center’s website marinediscoverycenter.org. For more information or to join the community activities that support this project, contact Tess Sailor-Tynes, Conservation Science Coordinator at 386/428-4828 or tess@marinediscoverycenter.org.
Marine Discovery Center | 520 Barracuda Blvd NSB 32169 | 386.428.4828