Key Points
The city of Gainesville received 17 acres donated for a future preserve near the Oaks Mall and also voted to buy another 20 acres for a new neighborhood park and multi-use trail.
The items came forward on the consent agenda of the city’s Dec. 4 regular meeting.
Gainesville developer Nathan Collier donated the 17 acres, zoned for planned development, for a preserve named in honor of his father, Courtland Alden Collier, a former city mayor and commissioner for 18 years.
The property borders SW 62nd Boulevard to its west and the Sugarfoot Prairie Conservation Area to its east. According to the city, the property’s current market value was estimated at $3.4 million by Ancre Group Valuation in November.
The city documents said Collier will be able to install a permanent commemorative sign, plaque or marker on the site. The property generated $4,829 in 2025 property taxes, of which the city received $118.
The Gainesville City Commission voted to buy 18 acres along SW 34th Street for $462,000 in order to complete phase two of its SW 47th Avenue Multiuse Trail project.
Purchased through the Wild Spaces Public Places surtax, the land will allow the multi-use trail and also allow a new park next to the Serenola Manor neighborhood. City documents said the land has an estimated market value of $1.3 million.
The commission also directed staff to finish a purchase of 0.89 acres located next to the Hawthorne Rail Trail and Sweetwater Branch Creek. The city will pay the market value of $107,000 through its Tree Mitigation Fund.
1. Wild Spaces Public Places surtax management needs to be audited for fraud! They (local government) spend like it’s not their money! Oh wait, it’s not their money!
2. I paid ~ $7,000 property tax last year on 1 acre lot; this “donor” paid ~ $4800 in property taxes for 18 acres in 2025? What’s wrong with this picture?
How do you spell fraud? GNV CC and AC BOCC! Next up? ACPS and SBAC taxing authority and waste, fraud, and abuse!