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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The newly restored Marr’s Pond – a
historic campus site University of Alabama students once used as
a swimming hole or a place for marriage proposals – will
be showcased to the community by the UA Student
Government Association Monday, April 25, at 2:30 p.m.
Marr’s Pond is located at the intersection of McCorvey and
Campus Drives behind the Student Services Building.
The event will include a brief walk through of the area and of
the different indigenous plants that were specially chosen to be
planted at the site. Sketches of the area in bloom for this coming
fall and next spring will also be on display.
“Our initial plan from the beginning was to use plants indigenous
to Alabama,” explained Hal Mooty, UA SGA president, who helped
organize the project.
“We strongly believed that a large part of the success
of the project was dependent on continuing to maximize the beauty
of this campus by using what is all around us. This type of project
on our campus is unprecedented in its effort to promote the natural
ecosystem at Marr’s Pond so that the area can be a learning
tool for students in and out of the classroom,” he said.
A master plan for Marr’s Pond was created by Ross & Kelly
Landscape Architects of Birmingham, and the design was broken down
into work phases done by students. “The intent all along
was to have the project professionally drawn up and overseen with
students aiding in the majority of the actual planting,” Mooty
noted.
Site prep work began during spring break; the first day of planting
for UA students began on April 9 with completion set for April
25.
“We are thrilled with the upcoming completion of the project
and have been so thankful for the support that we have received
from the UA administration and West Alabama community,” Mooty
said.
“Since this project began, more and more people will pass
by and stop at Marr’s Pond to ask questions and encourage
those who are working. More plant and aquatic life has already
been added, and the effects of such an initiative are already beginning
to show,” Mooty said.
For more information, contact Hal Mooty, UA SGA president at 334/538-5785, mooty001@bama.ua.edu.
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