Global parkrun community expands to West End 

Participants cross the bridge on the Depot Park course. Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun (1)
Participants cross the bridge on the Depot Park course.
Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun

The weekly Saturday 5K run synonymous with Gainesville’s Depot Park is expanding to Jonesville at West End Community Park with its inaugural parkrun on Saturday, July 12. 

The free event will start at 7:30 a.m. at 12830 W. Newberry Rd. and is open to all ages, running or walking fitness levels, even “barkrunners”—dogs on leashes. But parkrun isn’t just a typical walk in the park.  

Participants are timed with a barcode retrieved at registration that can be used for a lifetime at any parkrun event in the world.  

Become A Member

Mainstreet does not have a paywall, but pavement-pounding journalism is not free. Join your neighbors who make this vital work possible.

With over 2,500 parkruns hosted across 23 nations, the Jonesville parkrun chapter will be the second in Alachua County, seventh in Florida and 89th in the U.S. 

Alachua County parkrun founder Shauna Dixon participates in Parkrun themed for St. Patrick's Day. Courtesy of Shauna Dixon
Courtesy of Shauna Dixon Alachua County parkrun founder Shauna Dixon participates in parkrun themed for St. Patrick’s Day.

“The county has been wonderful working on the course for us and getting it to a safe condition,” Alachua County parkrun founder Shauna Dixon told Mainstreet after finishing a run on the new course. “I’m going to be very proud to show it off on Saturday at our inaugural event.” 

Unlike most new run clubs popping up on social media in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, and as an alternative to dating apps, parkrun started in 2004 at Bushy Park near London, England, as a time trial for a group of 13 runners.  

The group doubled in size as it continued meeting and hasn’t stopped since. According to elliottline.com, 326,000 people participated in the July 5-6 parkruns, with individual event attendance ranging from as little as 14 participants to over 1,600. Around 25,000 of the registrants were first-time participants. 

“Milestone” T-shirts can be earned after 25, 50, 100, 250 and 500 parkruns to help incentivize event runners, walkers and volunteers to keep showing up. Junior parkrunners, kids ages 10 and under, can also earn a milestone T-shirt after 10 parkruns. 

Depot Park parkrun participants at the July 5 event. Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun (1)
Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun Depot Park parkrun participants at the July 5 event.

But Dixon, 63, said the parkrun community itself is enough to show up for once and keep coming back. 

Originally from Ireland, Dixon said she got to the idea for starting a parkrun in Gainesville after attending one in England while visiting her sisters. She said she instantly fell in love with the community and started working to recreate it. 

Between going to necessary meetings for proper permitting, locating the best course and rallying her friends together to help meet the minimum number of required volunteers, Dixon said it took about a year before the first parkrun commenced at Depot Park in 2019. 

Since the first run drew around 80 participants, hundreds of Alachua County residents have logged parkrun miles at Depot Park.  

Dixon said she comes away from parkruns “on a cloud” after seeing how people come together to push each other towards goals and celebrate successes, such as last week when a regular participant who is blind and led around the course by volunteers celebrated his 200th parkrun. 

Parkrun volunteers put on the July 5 event at Depot Park. Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun (1)
Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun Parkrun volunteers put on the July 5 event at Depot Park.

“I’m passionate about people just moving, whatever it be,” she said. “I’ve seen so many people who have never done a 5K or people who have done their 50th 5K, people who have lost weight on their parkrun journey and they’re now doing marathons, all because they came out, they tried Parkrun. It’s so rewarding, and it makes me incredibly proud of not just our parkruns, but parkrun as a corporation, as a community.” 

With the growth of parkrun at Depot Park, Dixon said the timing of Alachua County turning West End Golf Course into West End Community Park couldn’t have been better.  

She said she received great support from the county when she approached them with the idea, and especially from Alachua County Board of County Commissioner Anna Prizzia, who attended the Depot Park parkrun.  

West End Community parkrun run will become the second parkrun in the county and Florida’s seventh when it launches on July 12. Courtesy of Parkrun
Courtesy of parkrun West End Community parkrun run will become the second parkrun in the county and Florida’s seventh when it launches on July 12.

The West End parkrun will be a 5K (5 kilometer/3.10 mile) loop with pavement, grass and hills that Dixon said City of Gainesville Manager of Park Operations John Weber helped curate and will allow participants a challenging alternative to Depot Park’s flat and paved loops. In February, Alachua County hosted the World Masters Athletics Indoor Championships cross country race on the West End course. 

Although parkrun does not provide water stations and the West End location only has porta potties, Dixon said more permanent restrooms will be built as part of the county’s long-term plan for the park. She said strollers are welcome at Depot Park and West End but may struggle on the golf course terrain. 

Dixon said the Depot Park parkrun will be in good hands under co-event director Kristen Bryant and parkrun regular Anne Ray, while Dixon and Lisa Brosky operate the West End parkrun.

A runner completes the Depot Park course. Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun (1)
Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun A runner completes the Depot Park course.

“We now have the two options,” she said. “You can go to [Depot Park], the easier, faster one at an equal target and come out here [to West End] and give yourself a bit of a challenge. Walkers are welcome and encouraged.” 

While Saturday’s event at West End has secured all its volunteers, Dixon said more will be needed in the future. Roles for all ages including youth and teens involve timekeeping, barcode scanning, course set-up and “tailwalking”—finishing last so no one else has to. 

Dixon said West End participants should log their home parkrun as West End Community Park online, where results will also be published.  

Volunteers and participants gather for parkrun at Depot Park. Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun (1)
Courtesy of Depot Park parkrun Volunteers and participants gather for parkrun at Depot Park.

Other parkruns in Florida include Clermont Waterfront near Orlando, Weedon Island Preserve in St. Petersburg, Halsema Trailhead and Ed Austin Regional in Jacksonville, and Rec Plex North in Pensacola. 

Can’t make it to Depot Park or West End for 7:30 a.m. Saturday parkruns? Check out one of these other running clubs in Alachua County: 

  • Peak Pulse Run Club 
    When: 6 p.m. Thursdays, 8 a.m. Saturdays 
    Where: Depot Park (874 SE 4th St., Gainesville) Thursdays, Fourth Avenue Food Park (409 SW 4th Ave., Gainesville) Saturdays 
  • Two Rules Running 
    When: 6:15 p.m. on Mondays 
    Where: Cypress and Grove Brewing (1001 NW 4th St., Gainesville) 
  • Running Tabs Run Club 
    When: 6:15 p.m. on Thursdays 
    Where: Tipple’s Brews and Wine (2440 SW 76th St. Ste. 110, Gainesville) 
  • Endure Run Club 
    When: 6 p.m. on Wednesdays 
    Where: High Springs Brewing Company (18562 NW 237th St., High Springs) 

Enjoying our local sports coverage? Get Mike Ridaught's twice weekly sports newsletter in your inbox.
Sports Newsletter Form
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments