Fayette County

10-acre downtown Lexington park near Rupp Arena will have free Wi-Fi

The 10-acre Town Branch Park will include a stage and a great lawn that can act as seating for performances. Town Branch Park and Sasaki, the design firm, released final designs for the park on Sept. 22, 2022.
The 10-acre Town Branch Park will include a stage and a great lawn that can act as seating for performances. Town Branch Park and Sasaki, the design firm, released final designs for the park on Sept. 22, 2022. Town Branch Park/Sasaki

A 10-acre park in the center of downtown Lexington will have free wireless service when the park opens next year.

Kinetic, a fiber internet company, will install and sustain Wi-Fi modems and routers in the park enabling free internet for the next decade. The cost over that time period is about $1 million.

The park, Gatton Park at Town Branch, broke ground last year. It will be next to the Central Bank Center and Rupp Arena between Main and High streets and the Oliver Lewis Way bridge.

Construction continues on Town Branch Park near Central Bank Center in downtown Lexington, Ky. Saturday, Dec. 16, 2023.
Construction continues on Town Branch Park near Central Bank Center in downtown Lexington, Ky. Saturday, Dec. 16, 2023. Ryan C. Hermens rhermens@herald-leader.com

The park will feature a 4,500-capacity amphitheater, playground, water play, dog park, gardens, public art, cafe and portions of the Town Branch trail. The park is paid for through more than $52 million in private donations, including $14 million from the Bill Gatton Foundation.

Gatton, a University of Kentucky graduate, has given sizable donations to UK and other Lexington organizations, including the YMCA of Central Kentucky. Gatton died in 2022.

Gatton Park Executive Director Alison Lankford said free Wi-Fi will allow the park to be a next-century park.

“Free Wi-Fi access is something people now expect as a standard part of the living experience wherever they go—and this will soon include Gatton Park,” Lankford said. “This infrastructure will help people connect and share experiences, whether they’re schoolchildren learning about ecology or festival goers or concertgoers enjoying performing arts and other cultural experiences.”

Kinetic Operations Senior Vice President Barry Bishop said the Wi-Fi will help up the park’s programming.

“In addition to Wi-Fi, visitors to the park will be able to learn through their cellphone or tablet about the park’s amenities, programs and ecology, or get directions to play areas, bike racks or interactive water features,” Bishop said. “Park visitors will be able to find the fastest route around the park or sit and enjoy their Wi-Fi enabled devices.”

Gatton Park is scheduled to open in the summer of 2025.

Beth Musgrave
Lexington Herald-Leader
Beth Musgrave has covered government and politics for the Herald-Leader for more than a decade. A graduate of Northwestern University, she has worked as a reporter in Kentucky, Indiana, Mississippi, Illinois and Washington D.C. Support my work with a digital subscription
Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW