Metering is ON
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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Businesses flowing in alongside new Yorkville whitewater park

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A kayak sits on top of a vehicle in the parking lot of the Geneva Kayak center in Yorkville on Thursday, May 12, 2011. Since the installation of the kayak shoot in the Fox River, the Center, along with other business have begun to move to the area. | Brian Powers~Sun-Times Media

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LearnING
to kayak
— SAFETY FIRST

Volunteers from the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary will teach a 4-hour canoe/kayak safety class May 21 at the Yorkville Public Library. The class begins at 8:30 a.m. at the library, 902 Game Farm Road. Fee is $20. Call 630-621-5544 or visit www.ChicagoSafeBoating.com.

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Updated: September 29, 2011 12:33AM



YORKVILLE — For years, community leaders have watched the whitewater facility under construction in the Fox River and dreamt of raging water, a sea of people and a flood of dollar signs.

That vision now seems to coming true.

Kayakers and canoeists are raving about the new whitewater rapids along the south side of the river, more and more people are coming to the site near downtown Yorkville as the weather gets nicer, and businesses are continuing to locate or expand nearby.

No sooner has the Geneva Kayak Center at 301 E. Hydraulic St. opened than it intends to expand. The company has asked the city, from which it leases its building, if it can build a deck along the north side of the building, facing the river, another deck with changing rooms along the south side, and upgrade a planned storage area along the south side.

The company intended to put in a storage trailer, but company officials had decided instead it will look nicer to have an open rack storage area for canoes and kayaks.

“We need the changing rooms,” said Scott Fairty, Geneva Kayak manager.

“People in this sport usually are in remote, wooded areas, so they are used to just changing quickly in the open. But this is in the middle of a downtown.”

The City Council this week approved an amendment to the original lease with Geneva Kayak to facilitate the expansion plans.

The expansion is indicative of the spirit surrounding the new whitewater facility. Fairty said the company just held its first whitewater class last weekend “and it was great.”

Kent Ford, a renowned paddle sports enthusiast, instructor and filmmaker, was at Geneva Kayak Center the first weekend of April to instruct a training class, and he became the latest to rave about the new facility.

On his website, he called it “amazing” because of its versatility so close to a teaching area, calling it “the most teaching-friendly” of the more than 20 whitewater parks he has been to.

“(It’s) like five miles of Class 2 river features jammed into a city park,” he said.

On the other side of Riverfront Park from Geneva Kayak, another business will open to take advantage of the increase in traffic downtown.

Aldermen this week also approved a lease with Creative Kernels, a popcorn stand, to operate in the south portion of the building at 131 E. Hydraulic St. for two years, with two 2­-year options after that.

The rent would be $200 a month, and the company would pay the city 5 percent gross revenues.

Creative Kernels will be a year-round business, but will sublet part of the building to Whitewater Custard, which will operate during the summers when use of the whitewater park is at its peak.

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