The Princeton Journal
Princeton Governance • September 6, 2025

Lake Parks Under Princeton’s Control: Upgrades, Costs, and Questions Ahead

By Bakr Al Qaraghuli, Editor

September 6, 2025

There’s been a lot of talk about Princeton “taking over” some lakeside parks, and plenty of confusion about what that actually means. Let’s clear it up. Here’s what’s happening, why it matters, and what comes next.

WHAT HAPPENED

On August 20, 2025, the Princeton Community Development Corporation (PCDC) voted unanimously to support local management of three Lavon Lake sites:

These parks still belong to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), but the plan is for Princeton to lease and manage them locally.

PCDC approved up to $50,000 per site each year for maintenance; that’s $150,000 total once the leases are signed.

Day-to-day operations would be handled by the City of Princeton, with PCDC funding and backing the effort as a community investment.

USACE has said the full transition could take 3–5 years.

WHY THIS MATTERS

Local management and accountability

Instead of calling a federal office miles away, Princeton residents will have direct city channels for service requests, upgrades, and programming.

Room for upgrades

Under local oversight, improvements like trails, lighting, parking, and safety could finally move forward, if the funding holds.

Community identity

From fishing at Clear Lake to family picnics at Twin Groves, these parks are part of Princeton life. Local control means local priorities.

Economic impact

Good parks raise nearby property values, bring visitors, and support small businesses like bait shops and food trucks.

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Princeton isn’t just growing; it’s the fastest-growing city in America (up about 30.6% from July 2023–2024). At this pace, parks aren’t extras. They’re part of the core infrastructure that makes the city livable.

CHALLENGES AHEAD

WHAT RESIDENTS CAN DO

BOTTOM LINE

For the first time, Princeton is set to manage its own lakeside parks. Done right, this could mean better amenities, a stronger community identity, and real economic benefits. Done wrong, it could stall in red tape and underfunding.

The responsibility is now with Princeton’s leaders and with residents who stay engaged and keep the pressure on.


Published September 6, 2025. Corrections or updates will appear here.