When I arrived at Nathan Benderson Park three years ago, I came with a very specific mission.
Having spent much of my career developing and operating world-class sports facilities, including serving as vice president of operations at IMG Academy, I was recruited to help elevate rowing and expand amateur sports opportunities at the Park.
Advertisement
What I discovered was something much bigger.
Yes, Nathan Benderson Park has become one of the premier rowing venues in North America.
We have hosted world championships, Olympic trials, national championships, collegiate regattas, youth competitions, dragon boat festivals, adaptive sports events and countless community gatherings.
Runners are in stride during Centerstone's annual Life;Story 5K/10K Run/Walk for Suicide Prevention in Nathan Benderson Park. It is among the numerous ocommunity events hosted at Nathan Benderson Park each year.
Athletes travel from around the world to train and compete here.
In fact, we are currently the home base for the U.S. Men’s National Rowing Team as it prepares for the 2028 Olympic Games.
Benderson Park belongs to everyone
What inspires us most, however, is not what happens on the water.
Advertisement
It's what happens around it.
Every day I see families walking and biking along the shoreline, veterans gathering with friends, first responders training, children racing across the playground, seniors staying active and neighbors connecting with one another.
I see a place that truly belongs to everyone.
That experience shaped my vision for the Park’s next chapter.
The proposed indoor multi-sport and community complex at Nathan Benderson Park will elevate rowing and paddling programs and help move us from a gold-standard venue to a truly world-leading one.
Advertisement
At the same time, it will allow us to host more national and international events, expand youth programming, introduce sports such as basketball, volleyball, cheerleading, martial arts and pickleball, and create year-round opportunities that simply don't exist today.
Whether it's youth or adult weekday sports leagues, weekend tournaments that bolster our tourism and hospitality industry, community events, or national championships, the facility will ensure that more people can benefit from Nathan Benderson Park in more ways throughout the year.
And we will not stop there.
The best public facilities serve a community during both its best moments and its greatest challenges.
Advertisement
As stewards of one of Sarasota County’s most important public assets, our responsibility is to create opportunities for recreation, support economic activity, attract visitors, enhance quality of life, and adapt to evolving community needs.
This facility accomplishes all of those goals.
Nathan Benderson Park already generates around $22 million in annual economic impact, and the new facility is projected to contribute an additional $20 million each year.
Year-round tournaments, events, and expanded programming will generate visitor spending at local hotels, restaurants, retailers and businesses while providing new recreational opportunities and gathering spaces for residents of all ages.
Advertisement
And there is another benefit that has received increased attention in recent weeks: resilience.
One of the most important responsibilities of any public asset is ensuring that it can serve the community when the community needs it most.
For years our partners have invested in making Nathan Benderson Park more resilient.
Water control systems surrounding the lake allow operators to adjust levels before major weather events.
Future island improvements associated with the new project will be constructed several feet higher than existing grades.
Infrastructure and access routes are being designed with long-term durability and post-storm functionality in mind.
Advertisement
An investment that serves, protects our community
Those investments matter because while many residents know Nathan Benderson Park as a sports venue, the park has also quietly supported emergency operations during times of need.
It has served as a location where resources can be staged, personnel coordinated and operations supported.
1 / 5
Top Sarasota events this weekend include free block parties, festivals
(Special to the Herald-Tribune/Janet Combs)
What has been missing in Sarasota is a large, climate-controlled facility capable of supporting those efforts at a much greater scale. The proposed complex helps fill that need.
Its primary purpose remains sports, recreation and community use.
Advertisement
However, in the aftermath of a major storm, it will also be built to provide a secure location where emergency personnel, recovery resources, volunteers and community partners can coordinate response and recovery efforts.
That is not a separate mission from serving the public. It is an extension of it.
The same facility that hosts a youth volleyball tournament can help support recovery operations after a hurricane.
The same building that welcomes athletes from around the world can provide a gathering point for those helping restore normalcy in our community.
To me, that is what smart public investment looks like.
Advertisement
Nathan Benderson Park has spent more than a decade proving what is possible when public and private partners work together around a shared vision.
This project is the next chapter in that story.
Bruce Patneaude
The best public investments don't force us to choose between recreation and resilience, between economic impact and community service.
They accomplish all of those goals at once.
That's the opportunity before us at Nathan Benderson Park, and it's an opportunity worth embracing.
Bruce Patneaude is the chief operating officer for the Nathan Benderson Park Conservancy.
This article originally appeared on Sarasota Herald-Tribune: Let's take Nathan Benderson Park to even greater heights | Opinion

German (DE)
English (US)
Spanish (ES)
French (FR)
Hindi (IN)
Italian (IT)
Russian (RU)
Comments
Get the most out of News by signing in
Sign In Register