Amity Point Recreation Reserve - Claytons Road - Minjerribah

A small outdoor fitness park can unlock a bigger local fix.

The activity park would draw more people across Claytons Road. That makes the crossing, speed calming, pothole repair, water check and safer visitor movement part of the same story instead of five separate little arguments.

Annotated aerial reference showing the proposed exercise area, parking and crossing point.
Marked-up reference: the activity strip sits south of Claytons Road and west of the proposed crossing. The road-base, unsealed parking and bus-turn area sits north of Claytons Road and east of the proposed crossing.

Why combine it?

Each part is stronger when the others are visible.

1

Activity brings people

Older locals, families, teens, campers, walkers and visitors get a free, visible place to move.

2

People create crossing demand

More movement across Claytons Road makes a zebra crossing and calmer traffic easier to justify.

3

Road works fix the rough edge

The potholes, unsealed parking edge and bus turnaround can be treated as part of access, not an afterthought.

4

Water makes it usable

A drinking fountain only makes sense if the pipe route, backflow, drainage and maintenance stack up.

5

Wildlife watchers need warning

Koala tours and visitors often look up into trees, stop for photos and drift close to the road without watching traffic.

6

Parking can guide behaviour

A clearer parking zone, crossing and park path could shift families away from ad hoc roadside stops and 4WD shortcuts.

Open sparse-tree reserve edge near the proposed activity area.

The place

More than 100 metres long, roughly 15-20 metres deep, and open enough to design properly.

The site does not need a cramped cluster of basic bars. It can balance space, shade, movement, rest, access and wildlife-aware traffic calming. The first job is to gather local observations cleanly, then use them to shape a better layout.

Start a survey note

Community invitation

Help price, test and improve the idea before money moves.

Residents can add site notes. Suppliers and tradies can provide comparable quotes. Volunteers can offer safe working bee tasks. The honour board can show support publicly without pretending every job is suitable for volunteers.