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One of Buffalo’s many Olmsted parks, Front Park (or The Front, as it was originally named) is situated along ”’Porter Avenue”’ just south of the ”’Peace Bridge”’ and contains a soccer field, tennis courts, and picnic facilities, as well as original features such as The Hippodrome, a 3.5-acre (1.5 ha) lawn intended for picnicking or informal team sports, and a terrace concourse for carriages adorned with a handsome statue of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry. Intended to both showcase and enhance the beauty of the Niagara River and Lake Erie and emphasize its significance to the history and identity of Buffalo, the park once also boasted extensive formal gardens. At the north end of the park stood ”’Fort Porter”’, built in the mid-1840s as a customshouse and military installation. Some time later, Olmsted was given the green light to extend the Front beyond the canal to the edge of the river itself, though it never materialized, this extension would have included playgrounds, a beach, and a boardwalk. Sadly, together with the West Side’s other Olmsted park, ”’Riverside Park”’, Front Park was badly damaged by the urban renewal that decimated the West Side in the middle 20th Century: the construction of Interstate 190 over the former canal bed robbed the concourse of its serene lake views, and the construction of the new plaza for the Peace Bridge in 1951 culled seven acres (2.5ha) from the size of the park, resulted in the demolition of Fort Porter, and routed noisy trucks bound for Canada through the park (the latter problem will be solved by the controversial expansion of the Peace Bridge plaza slated for the next few years, after which trucks will access the bridge from a new entrance away from the park).
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For the season
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Ok