Doors to parish-owned gym in Reserve open to little fanfare

By ROBIN SHANNON
Published/Last Modified on Wednesday, December 28, 2011 1:07 AM CST


L’Observateur

RESERVE – St. John the Baptist Parish officials last week quietly opened the doors to the new Regala Park gymnasium marking the end of a long-awaited initiative to bring a community indoor recreational facility to residents of the parish.

A group of teams involved in a parish Biddy Basketball league became the first residents to shoot hoops at the parish-owned gym. The $2.2 million, 15,000-square-foot facility was paid for with money from a bond issue approved by voters in 2009.

The new gymnasium at Regala Park opened its doors recently. (Staff photo by Robin Shannon)

“Contractors were wrapping up some cleanup work last week, but the gym is done and we wanted to get it open for resident use,” said St. John Parish spokesperson Paige Braud. “We are planning a more festive ribbon cutting after the holidays so that residents can tour the facility.”

The two-story facility features a two-in-one basketball court that allows for division into two full courts for younger players. The gym includes three sets of goals that can accommodate two practice sessions at once. The larger court configuration features seating for more than 350 with a full kitchen and concession stand with access inside and outside the gym.

The gym is the first parish-owned indoor recreational facility in St. John. In the past, the parish was forced to rent out gyms from the St. John School system for recreation league events and activities. Braud said the gym gives the parish a place of its own rather than having to work around school system activities, which have often pre-empted recreation-league games and other events.

The facility also includes a set of offices and a conference room for the recreation department. Recreation Director Errol Manuel said the building will allow the department to move out of a portable trailer behind the Percy Hebert Building in LaPlace. Braud said the gym was designed to sustain hurricane force winds and could double as an emergency relocation point and distribution center for the parish in the event of a disaster.

Parish President Natalie Robottom said the gymnasium will serve as a starting point for further improvements to the Regala Park area. She said the recreation department is currently working on a checklist of other improvements that will help return the park to the prime recreational facility it once was.

“The parish has been lucky in recent years to be blessed with a wealth of recreational outlets across the parish for residents to enjoy,” Robottom said. “Regala Park has always been the premier park in St. John and this gym has been a premier attraction we have wanted to add for several years.”

Robottom said the gym would serve the needs of residents of all ages.

In addition to regular recreational department sports leagues, Robottom said the parish plans to open the gym up to the Southeast Louisiana War Veterans Home and the St. John Senior Citizens Center, which are both in close proximity to the gym site.

 

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The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of .

bright idea wrote on Dec 28, 2011 3:13 PM:

" charge admission and use the funds to upgrade the west bank water system. "

here we go again wrote on Dec 30, 2011 12:20 PM:

" another beautiful facility paid for by hardworking taxpayers; will soon be defaced and destroyed by the the ghetto thugs. this future too easy to predict.
sqve the pristeen pictures to compare to the degradation you will see in a year or two.
west bank taxpayer "

I agree wrote on Jan 3, 2012 9:12 AM:

" charge admission for the people that use it.
give the money back in services to the taxpayers who paid for it.
we are tired of freebies for the undeserving. "

how much did it cost wrote on Jan 24, 2012 8:22 PM:

" probably could have paid for west bank water repairs twice over. "

look at it and shake your head. wrote on Jan 24, 2012 11:35 PM:

" "The $2.2 million, 15,000-square-foot facility was paid for with money from a bond issue approved by voters in 2009"
big bucks spent for a hand full; while the west bank can't get decent water depending on somebody's grant to MAYBE
help improve the quality.
like the ferry; big bucks spent for a hand full of greedy hard heads who couldn't care less if the west bank has decent water. "

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