Photos by Michael S. Lockett / Juneau Empire                                The Juneau Mountain Bike Alliance and City and Borough of Juneau are collaborating to finish a new pump track for bicycle riders in Cope Park, due to be finished within weeks.

Photos by Michael S. Lockett / Juneau Empire The Juneau Mountain Bike Alliance and City and Borough of Juneau are collaborating to finish a new pump track for bicycle riders in Cope Park, due to be finished within weeks.

Outdoors pump track work is ramping up

Cope Park is about to have a new way to keep entertained.

A pump track for bicycling in Cope Park is heading toward completion as workers shape material for the rolling, sinuous course weaving between the trees.

“The design of this track was tricky,” said Juneau Mountain Bike Alliance Vice President Reid Harris in an interview. “We were able to stretch it about 30 feet to go around some trees. We let the natural topology and biology dictate the design.”

A pump track is designed for users to traverse by using up and down body motions to push them over the hills and curves, rather than peddling, Harris said. Typical pump tracks are created in flat empty spaces, but Juneau’s environment requires designers to work the course between the trees of the park.

Reid Harris, vice president of the Juneau Mountain Bike Alliance, holds the basic plans for the new pump track being built at Cope Park on Sept. 16, 2020. (Michael S. Lockett / Juneau Empire)

Reid Harris, vice president of the Juneau Mountain Bike Alliance, holds the basic plans for the new pump track being built at Cope Park on Sept. 16, 2020. (Michael S. Lockett / Juneau Empire)

“The ground wasn’t entirely flat so we had to grade it,” Harris said. “You hand shape it, wet it down and pound it with the machine.”

The track is created using fill dredged from the basin of Gold Creek as part of an unrelated project and recycled asphalt product, or RAP. The course required RAP, reclaimed from an old runway, because Juneau’s healthy amount of rainfall would wash out anything less compactable, Harris said.

City decides to keep emergency warming shelter where it is

“It probably would have been built a little earlier in the summer but we had our hands filled,” said City and Borough of Juneau’s Parks and Recreation deputy director Michele Elfers in a phone interview. “That timing worked out because that’s the material (from the basin dredging) we’re using for the base.”

Whitney Parks, a member of Juneau’s COVID Conservation Corps, chops logs Wednesday as she helps with the construction of the new pump track at Cope Park.

Whitney Parks, a member of Juneau’s COVID Conservation Corps, chops logs Wednesday as she helps with the construction of the new pump track at Cope Park.

The city contributed $5,000 from its capital improvement project budget, a welcome addition to the JMBA, who raised the majority of money from donations, Harris said. JMBA’s contribution to the project will likely be about $15,000, Harris said, which was only possible because of people’s willingness to lend a hand voluntarily. COVID Conservation Corps members — a program established by the city to put people to work amid the pandemic and funded by federal coronavirus relief money — have also taken part in clearing a tree that had to be removed.

“It’s been a great collaborative project. Lots of volunteers have been showing up. The only way to do it so cheap was with volunteer labor,” Harris said. “The CCC crew has been super helpful.”

Members of the Juneau Mountain Bike Alliance check the progress of the new pump track against the plans.

Members of the Juneau Mountain Bike Alliance check the progress of the new pump track against the plans.

Other organizations, such as SJS Excavation, have donated the use of equipment, a small digger which has helped immeasurably with the project, Harris said. Capital City Fire/Rescue also assisted the project by loaning them the equipment to use a fire hydrant as a water source to help wet down the material as they’re shaping it, Harris said.

The park will be open for use within a few weeks, Harris said. Riders are discouraged from using the track until then, as any wear on the track before it’s fully formed will require remedial action and will stretch out the completion date.

Contact reporter Michael S. Lockett at 757-621-1197 or mlockett@juneauempire.com

More in Sports

An outdoor basketball hoop is seen in Bethel in October 2022. Alaskans will be able to play only on sports teams that match their gender at birth through college if a new bill becomes law. (Photo by Claire Stremple)
Alaska House committee advances, expands proposal to bar trans girls from girls sports

Bill adds elementary, middle school and collegiate sports to limits in place for high school.

Utah’s Alissa Pili, right, poses for a photo with WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert after being selected eighth overall by the Minnesota Lynx during the first round of the WNBA basketball draft on Monday in New York. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)
Alaska’s Alissa Pili selected by Minnesota Lynx as eighth pick in WNBA Draft

Two-time All-American is fifth Alaskan to be drafted, third to go in the top 10.

Pseudoscorpions are very small predators of springtails and mites. (Photo by Bob Armstrong)
On the Trails: Intertidal explorations

A bit of exploration of the rocky intertidal zone near Shaman Island… Continue reading

The author’s wife fights a steelhead while the author contemplates fly selection. (Photo by Jeff Lund)
I Went to the Woods: The fear of missing fish

Student: “You know, FOMO, the Fear Of Missing Out” Me: “I know… Continue reading

Astrophysicists Lindsay Glesener, left, and Sabrina Savage enjoy the sunshine on an observation deck at the Neil Davis Science Center on a hilltop at Poker Flat Research Range north of Fairbanks. (Photo by Ned Rozell)
Alaska Science Forum: Waiting for the sun at Poker Flat

POKER FLAT RESEARCH RANGE — Under a bluebird sky and perched above… Continue reading

Maddy Fortunato, a Chickaloon middle school student, sets to attempt the one-hand reach by touching a suspended ball while remaining balanced on the other hand during the Traditional Games on Sunday at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Striving for the perfect balance of competition, camaraderie at seventh annual Traditional Games

More than 250 participants pursue personal goals while helping others during Indigenous events.

Purple mountain saxifrage blooms on cliffs along Perseverance Trail in early April. (Photo by Pam Bergeson)
On the Trails: Flowers and their visitors

Flowers influence their visitors in several ways. Visitors may be attracted by… Continue reading

Elias Lowell, 15, balances his way to the end of the pond during the annual Slush Cup at Eaglecrest Ski Area on Sunday, the last day of what officials called and up-and-down season. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Up-and-down season at Eaglecrest ends on splashy note with Slush Cup

Ski area’s annual beach party features ice-filled water, snowy shores and showboating skimmers.

Aren Gunderson of the UA Museum of the North inspects the back paw of a Siberian tiger donated recently by officials of the Alaska Zoo in Anchorage after the tiger died at age 19. (Photo by Ned Rozell)
Alaska Science Forum: Siberian tiger takes final rest at museum

It’s a safe bet that Aren Gunderson’s Toyota Tundra is the only… Continue reading

Most Read