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Parks & Fields
Visit a Park
Planning a family picnic, wedding, or maybe a company outing? The Concord Parks and Recreation Department would be happy to schedule your event in one of our City Parks. Click here for a complete list of our parks Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park Visit a Park.
Anyone renting a space including leagues, sports camps and groups (non profit or for profit) are required to obtain a permit, pay approved fees and provide a certificate of insurance prior to using any City of Concord Park. Please note: our athletic fields are booked months in advance and we work with existing leagues and organizations prior to adding new organizations. Click here for more rental and field use information.
If you are looking to use State House Plaza, Eagle Square or Bicentennial Square please contact the Code Division at 603-225-8580.
General Parks Rules:
- Please carry in and carry out your trash.
- No overnight parking or camping allowed in the parks.
- Permits are required for any organized event or game.
- The following parks have porta toilets on seasonal basis: Rollins, Martin, Memorial Field, White, Keach, Merrill, Beaver Meadow and Rolfe.
- Dog owners are required to have their dogs on a leash at all times while using a park (City Ordinance 6-1-5) .
- Dog owners are required to "scoop the poop." Carry in –Carry out applies to furry domestics too, and dog owners are asked to bring a suitable bag for cleaning up after their dogs. The City has an ordinance requiring dogs to be on a leash at all times when using any park (unless inside the Dog Park) and for owners to pick up their dog’s waste (City Ordinance 6-1-5 and 12-1). Please pick up and remove your dog’s waste (bag and dispose at home) and keep all dogs on a leash while using any of our neighborhood Parks.
- No trash or dog waste bags in the porta toilets.
- No metal detecting in any city parks.
- Our goal is for all parks to operate under a carry-in/carry-out trash policy. However, three parks currently still have a limited number of trash cans: Rollins, White, and Rolfe Parks. Trash cans are emptied only twice a week. If a can is full, please help keep our parks and open spaces clean by carrying out all of your trash and disposing of it at home.
- No alcohol allowed in parks without written approval and permits issued by the City of Concord. Please note several parks, per their deed, are not allowed to host alcohol events.
- All City of Concord Ordinances also need to be followed.
- All Parks are closed from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. each night.
Park users are asked and expected to follow the common practice of “Carry in-Carry out”—that is, whatever you carry in to the parks, you should carry out, and any trash disposed of once you get home. You might think of it as crowdsourcing trash management, while avoiding having a smelly, overflowing trash bin that attracts vermin in our parks.
Access to City Parks and Open Spaces
Our parks are equally accessible and available to all people regardless of income level, ethnicity, gender, ability, or age. Our parks and open spaces including the maintenance, safety, and accessibility are provided on an equitable basis to all citizens of Concord/Penacook. Neighborhood parks across the city are all maintained to same high standard. We believe it’s a right, not just a privilege, for our residents to have safe, healthy access to parks and open spaces.
The benefits of social equity and universal access to public parks and open space are many, including:
- Public enjoyment and engagement. Where parks and open space are plentiful our residents enjoy the closest attachment and engagement within their communities;
- Quality recreation time with family and friends. Parks and Recreation services provide a space and a reason to partake in enjoying quality time, relaxation, and fun among family members and friends, thus strengthening the social and familial bonds that provide balance and satisfaction in life;
- Improvement of mental and physical health. Parks and Recreation can reduce the impacts of chronic diseases, especially in such vulnerable populations as children, seniors, and the underserved;
- Measurable decreases in rates of crime and other detrimental activities. Communities are safer as a result of a wholesome atmosphere created by well‐managed parks and open spaces in communities through healthy activities and programming for all people.
Learn more about Concord's parks in the YouTube playlist below!