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Title
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Pondering a Sweeping Vista of Brush Creek Beauty
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Description
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Illustrations and map of proposed improvements along Brush Creek. The design was developed by Bucher, Willis & Ratliff Consulting Engineers, Planners & Architects under commission by the parks department. Target date for completion is 2020; flood control portion, 2011.
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Date
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2003-05-14
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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Seeking Brush Creek's Promise
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Description
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According to this article, the development of Brush Creek involved three parts: (1) a flood protection project; (2) a project prettier than the concrete trough the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers suggested; (3) to promote development along the creek which would be a magnet for people. Efforts to promote people to the area have so far mostly failed. Events that might work are mentioned. Includes a map of the creek entitled "Along Brush Creek." Work on the creek was spurred by the 1977 flood that swamped the Plaza and took 25 lives. The Corps of Engineers agreed to build a protection system that would essentially create a large trough from Roanoke Parkway to Troost Avenue. Within it would flow the trickle that Brush Creek remains upstream from Roanoke.
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Date
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2005-07-11
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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The Long Struggle to Tame Brush Creek.
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Description
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Article chronicles the history behind the Brush Creek Flood Control and Beautification Project begun in the 1980s. Besides flood control, the project was designed to unite various neighborhoods.
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Date
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2004-05
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Object Type
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Magazine Article
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Title
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City beneath a City
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Description
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Article about the sewer works under the city in general, also featuring a discussion on their role in flood prevention, including "the expressway of the sewer system," Brush Creek.
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Date
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1979-09
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Object Type
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Magazine Article
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Title
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First Overhaul on Brush Creek
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Description
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The paving of the creek bed began in November 1935, at a cost originally estimated at $1,395,000, and at one time employed 1,647 WPA workers. Concrete was laid eight to 10 inches thick and 70 feet wide. City officials explained at the time that paving the creek bed would prevent accumulation of stagnant pools, which had created a nuisance and would also permit the channel to empty floodwaters into the Blue River an hour or more sooner and prevent backing up. Severe flooding occurred on the creek in 1934 and 1935. Opponents of the T. J. Pendergast political machine then in control of the city affairs criticized the project, however, as a windfall for Pendergast's concrete company [Ready-Mixed Concrete Company].
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Date
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1962-06-20
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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Kansas City's Deluge
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Description
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Photos and article about the destructive flash flood along Brush Creek and the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City in 1977, sweeping away numerous automobiles and engulfing a trailer park, etc.
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Date
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1977-09-26
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Object Type
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Magazine Article
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Title
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Troost Span Proposal Takes a Sleek Shape
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Description
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A public meeting is planned for June 16, 2005, evening to discuss the new Troost Avenue bridge over Brush Creek. ''The project design combines artistic and functional elements as part of the channel improvements for flood control on Brush Creek.'' Article includes drawing of the proposed bridge.
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Date
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2005-06-16
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article