Triangle Park

Triangle Park is a private park built for public use. Originally built in 1981 with funding provided by the Triangle Foundation, Inc., the foundation provided additional funding for an extensive renovation of the park in 2011. Central Bank Center manages and maintains the park. The park is patrolled by both Lexington police and the security force of the corporation. 

A FEW RULES – Please enjoy Triangle Park including the great lawn. You are welcome to visit the park during the hours posted. And, you may walk your dog in the park as long as your pet is on a leash. Please do not walk your pet on the grass. In all cases, please clean up after your pet. The gardens are here for your enjoyment, but please do not enter the ivy areas and flowerbeds. Picking flowers is not allowed. To spread blankets on the lawn is allow, but no plastic material or tarpaulin is permitted. Please enjoy the park chairs and tables and deposit waste in trash receptacles. Please extinguish cigarettes in receptacles outside the park before entering the park. Triangle Park is a no smoking public space. Souvenir photos are allowed but commercial photography must be LCC permit only.

PARK GUIDELINES and ACTIVITIES PROHIBITED – Drug use is not allowed or permitted, alcohol use outside the designated areas, bringing alcohol into the park, public drunkenness, loitering, shopping carts, knapsacks, entering the stair stepped arc fountain, rummaging in the trash receptacles, amplified music that disturbs others, performances except by permit, commercial activity except by permit, bicycle riding, skateboarding or rollerblading, and public protesting.

HISTORY OF THE PARK – The park was designed by internationally acclaimed landscape architect, Robert Zion. Mr. Zion, a pioneer in modernism in landscape architecture designed some of New York’s most cherished oases. Though Mr. Zion was not well known to the public, the parks and public spaces created by his firm, Zion and Breen, are landmarks of civic design, Samuel Paley Plaza (better known as Paley Park), the atrium of the I.B.M. Building, the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden of the Museum of Modern Art, and the grounds surrounding the Statue of Liberty.

PARK HOURS OF OPERATION THIS WINTER.

Weekdays, 7am-11pm

Weekends, 7am-11pm

DO YOU ENJOY THE PARK? If so, management would like to hear your ideas and suggestions.

Please call us at (859) 233-4567, Ext. 3251

 

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