Park City to Host Community Meeting on Park Meadows Transportation Proposals
Park City will hold a community conversation Feb. 24 at the MARC to gather input on a planned 12-foot multiuse path on Little Kate Road and other Park Meadows transportation proposals.

Park City will host a community conversation titled "Community Conversation: Park Meadows Bike, Pedestrian, and Transit Improvements" Tuesday, Feb. 24 from 5:00 to 6:30 p.m. at the MARC to present updates and gather public input on transportation proposals in the Park Meadows neighborhood.
City planners will present several specific proposals at the MARC meeting, including a planned 12-foot multiuse path on the north side of Little Kate Road, traffic calming measures on Holiday Ranch Loop Road, bus stop improvements, and potential changes to the 20 Tan bus route. Park City’s event notice also invites attendees to share feedback on what else they’d like to see throughout Park Meadows.
The Park Meadows project reached a design milestone in winter 2025, with 90% design completion for pedestrian and bicycle improvements and planned bus stop upgrades, the city says. Funding for the improvements is supported through a combination of federal, state, county, and local sources, and the effort builds on community input from the Pedestrian & Bicycle Plan, Park City Forward, and the Neighborhoods First Streets Program. Planners say the upgrades aim to add pedestrian and bike facilities, calm traffic speeds, and enhance Safe Routes to School connections for students and families.
Scope for the Park Meadows project shifted after recent council discussion: following a Park City Council discussion on Feb. 3, Monitor Drive is no longer included in this project, the city said. Earlier project materials had listed upgrades along Little Kate Road, Monitor Drive, and Lucky John Drive; the city’s Feb. 3 action removed Monitor Drive from the current scope while Lucky John Drive remains listed in prior planning descriptions.

The Park Meadows work ties into a larger citywide bus stop effort: Park City engagement materials state the city plans to upgrade about 65% of bus stops citywide through 2027, and city outreach has also described the program as improving more than 80 Park City Transit stops. Past transportation outreach has featured project managers from projects such as Re-create 248 and addressed topics including dogs on buses and parking in Old Town.
Senior Transportation Director Connor Campobasso said project managers will be on hand for public engagement and explained how staff present projects: "All the project managers will be there representing each of the projects," he said. "So a lot of them will bring either some kind of poster board or something to kind of talk through the different projects." He added, "The public can expect to see updated schedules."
Residents and interested parties can contact Project Manager Steven Dennis at steven.dennis@parkcity.gov or Transportation Planner Anna Maki at anna.maki@parkcity.gov, send bus stop comments to BusStopComments@parkcity.gov, or call Park City at 435-615-5000. The city’s Park Meadows engagement page contains full project details, and Park City encourages the public to attend the Feb. 24 meeting at the MARC. Park City Municipal provided an image of the proposed 12-foot multiuse path on the north side of Little Kate Road used in outreach materials.
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