VIRGINIA BEACH — A former golf course is undergoing a massive transformation into a repository for stormwater and an extensive public park. But it’s costing more than anticipated to pull off such a feat.
The disposal of excavated material from the former Bow Creek Golf Course off Rosemont Road has exceeded the city’s original estimate by $8 million, pushing the price tag of the project’s first phase of construction up to $36.4 million.
The City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved an increase in the city’s construction contract with Trident Civil Inc. for Bow Creek Stormwater Park. The item was on the consent agenda.
To date, Virginia Beach has appropriated nearly $77 million for the stormwater park, with the money coming from the 2021 bond referendum, which allowed the city to issue up to $567 million in bonds to address stormwater problems. A portion of the real estate tax pays the debt service.
A host of other flood protection projects are underway across the city and more are planned, but the estimated cost to complete them is expected to nearly double to $1 billion as a result of the rising price of materials and labor.
Hampton Roads cities plagued by flooding ask state to commit $250 million
At Bow Creek, the hike in the construction cost is a result of the poor quality of the excavated soil that needs to be removed from the site. Roughly 1 million cubic yards of earth material will be removed. For comparison, a washing machine is roughly 1 cubic yard.
The dirt from Bow Creek was to be used at the city landfill, but the quality of the material can’t support the weight of covers that seal the waste, according to public works. It’s costing more to ship it to other privately owned dump sites in southern Virginia Beach, Chesapeake and North Carolina.
The design of Bow Creek Stormwater Park will relieve flooding in the low-lying Princess Anne Plaza neighborhood. It’s being completed in two phases, both of which include the construction of walking and biking trails.
The first phase will be complete and open to the public in mid-2027, according to to city public works officials. It will include stormwater storage, 2 miles of shared-use path and nature trails, wildlife viewing blinds, an elevated observation platform and several bridges connecting the trails.
The second phase is under design and will provide additional stormwater storage, walking trails and mountain bike trails, a playground and pickleball courts. Additional parking will be included in both phases. The old golf course clubhouse will be converted into rentable event space. The entire project will be completed by mid-2030.
Part of the area is open to the public now. The former golf cart path is fenced off from construction and is a 2-mile trail network. It can be accessed behind the playground in the Bow Creek Recreational Center parking lot off Clubhouse Road.
Stacy Parker, 757-222-5125, stacy.parker@pilotonline.com