Denver International Airport has increased the acreage of its prairie grasslands managed by Denver Parks and Recreation, as part of its Vision 100 initiative.
At 53 square miles, Denver International Airport (DEN) is the largest airport in the United States by land size, and the second largest in the world. Within that space are hundreds of acres of native prairie grasslands, including some of the most intact remnant parcels of historic prairie land that exist in Denver today.
Denver Parks and Recreation (DPR) previously oversaw, managed and maintained 198 acres of DEN’s prairie grasslands. An expanded Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), which began on January 14, increased the area managed by DPR to approximately 580 acres located in the Peña Scenic Buffer, along Second Creek, north of Peña Boulevard at Tower Road, and at the property line between DEN and the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge. This acreage is the largest open space in the City and County of Denver – approximately twice the size of City Park, the largest park in Denver. This area includes First Creek and Second Creek, two waterways home to diverse habitats that support a wide range of wildlife species including nesting bald eagles. DPR’s management of additional acreage will benefit the airport and surrounding communities in a variety of ways, including carbon sequestration, soil health, erosion control, noxious weed control and treatment, prairie grassland restoration, and maintenance of DEN’s multi-use trail system. Grassland restoration could eventually include the use of DEN compost to assist reseeding.
“One of the guiding principles of Vision 100, our strategic plan, is to become the greenest airport in the world,” said DEN CEO Phil Washington. “By utilising Denver Parks and Recreation’s knowledge and understanding of prairie grasslands, our airport is better equipped to sustainably enhance the nature and wildlife that exists on DEN property.”
Through this partnership, DEN will pursue grant funding to connect a regional multimodal trail system to the airport. The partnership will enhance equity initiatives that increase access to the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge through Montbello and the Far Northeast – neighbourhoods that are primarily made up of communities of colour. Bison, nesting eagles, burrowing owls and black footed ferrets are among the wildlife within the Refuge. DEN and DPR are also exploring ways the partnership can create an opportunity to restart conversations with the Refuge to expand the bison habitat east onto DEN land.
Image: Denver International Airport