George Mason University

01/08/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 01/09/2025 08:41

George Mason’s recreation program is helping bring parks to the people

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One of the special things about Northern Virginia is its blend of thriving city life with vast green spaces. Visitors and residents can enjoy more than 12,000 acres of parks and recreation areas across three counties and three cities thanks to the work of NOVA Parks. This fall, a brand-new park opened in Ashburn, Virginia, with a few familiar faces from George Mason University at its helm.

Photo provided.

Reservoir Park is a 600-acre park around Beaverdam Reservoir. Built and operated as a partnership between NOVA Parks and Loudoun Water, the park has conservation and education at the forefront of its design. From plants that filter water runoff into the reservoir, to butterfly roofs that drain water down a singular center path onto rocks to avoid excessive soil erosion, to sustainable build materials, the park preserves the landscape while educating visitors on the lifecycle of a drop of water. Educational installations along the trail also give visitors tactile lessons: a hand pump that demonstrates the amount of force required to bring water from the reservoir to a faucet, for example.

"Most parks are built up over time, with facilities developing as community needs change," said Paul Gilbert, executive director of NOVA Parks and the executive-in-residence of the recreation management program at George Mason. "I've never seen a park like this one, where everything is designed intentionally with a clear purpose and story in mind. It's both beautiful and thoughtful."

The benefits of parks are immense: increased property values, opportunities for physical activity, and mental health improvements, to name a few. "Numerous studies show that the benefits of exercise in nature far exceed exercise indoors," Gilbert said. "It enriches lives, and it will continue to enrich lives, not just for this season but for generations to come."

For George Mason students, the benefits of NOVA Parks extend to their education and, for some, even their careers.

Paul Gilbert (left) and Bella Trimner. Photo provided.

"There's a strong connection between NOVA Parks and George Mason," Gilbert said. "Through NOVA parks, students have access to internships, practicums, and careers. We help make their education not just academic but very actionable. And in return, we get high-quality employees excited to work in the parks they've grown up around."

One shining example is Bella Trimner, a winter 2024 graduate with a degree in recreation management.

Trimner has a long history with NOVA Parks. She started working at Fountainhead Regional Park as a junior park ranger at 17, quickly rising through the ranks to site supervisor. "I absolutely loved it and realized that this was something I could see myself making a career out of," she said.

Her supervisor David Deem, BS in Recreation Management '21 and a current George Mason graduate student in recreation administration, recommended George Mason for her education because of its nationally recognized recreation management program.

When Trimner made the decision to get her degree and make a career out of parks management, she told the park operations superintendents that she hoped to become a parks specialist in the future.

"My plan was to take that role in five years. Instead, when I had that conversation, they said, 'Well, we're actually building a new park that will be similar to Fountainhead. It might be exactly what you're looking for.'"

It was. Within a year, Trimner became the first parks specialist for the new Reservoir Park. Her days are varied-from running chainsaws for trail clearing, to being an ambassador for the park, to planning park programming-but she believes her education has directly impacted how quickly she has acclimated to this new managerial role.

"I have used assignments from my classes as starting points for programming plans and shared templates with my staff. When we formalized the 8-mile trail around the reservoir, I directly referenced what I'd learned about trail planning and grading from my classes on land acquisition, resource management, and accessibility. We're implementing an interpretational signage plan that is directly influenced by a course I took with Dr. Ellen Rodgers. There's so much from my courses that I'm using every day in every aspect of my job," she said.

Trimner, Gilbert said, is a rock star. "When you step into a manager position at an existing park, you're improving upon existing procedures, programming, and facilities. But as part of the management team of a brand-new park, Bella is creating all those things. We gave her a blank slate to work with. And she's done an amazing job."

As a fellow George Mason graduate, Gilbert firmly believes in the great contributions George Mason offers the community. "NOVA Parks relies heavily on the recreation program at George Mason, and it's great to have such a strong program with great talent right in our backyard," Gilbert said.

Trimner agreed. "Seeing George Mason on a resume is a green flag for us."

From left: Recreation management faculty Laurence Chalip, Ellen Rodgers, Brenda Wiggins, Hung-Ling Liu, and Sammie Powers pose with Bella Trimner (far right) and Paul Gilbert (back center). Photo provided.