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$500,000 grant accepted for new pedestrian bridge near downtown Appleton

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APPLETON (NBC 26) -- The Community Foundation for the Fox Valley Region announced a $500,000 grant will help pay for construction of a new bicycle and pedestrian bridge over the Fox River Power canal near downtown Appleton.

On Wednesday, Appleton Common Council voted to accept the grant for the walkway between the future Ellen Kort Peace Park and Pullman’s restaurant.

According to a news release from the Community Foundation for the Fox Valley Region, the grant comes from the the David L. and Rita E. Nelson Family Fund, established within the Community Foundation with an estate gift of more than $100 million.

The Community Foundation says David Nelson was the former chief financial officer for both The Post-Crescent in Appleton and the Green Bay Press Gazette and an investor in radio stations and other businesses. His wife, Rita, retired as a teacher with the De Pere School District in 1992 but continued to serve as a substitute teacher into her 80s. Both died in 2017 in their 90s.

The council also voted to name the newly constructed 750-foot bicycle and pedestrian bridge in honor of the couple to recognize the lead gift, the Community Foundation says. The Nelson Family Fund also awarded the lead gift to the river crossing boardwalk being built connecting Little Chute to Kaukauna.

Plans originally called for conversion of an existing Appleton railroad trestle, but an engineering study found the renovation extremely costly. The new trestle will be just downstream from the old railroad trestle. It has not been decided when or if the old trestle will be removed, the Community Foundation says.

According to a news release, total project cost is estimated at $2.8 million, with $300,000 coming from a Greenways Committee grant from Outagamie County, from compensation paid for an electric transmission line built in the county. Construction is to begin in 2021 and conclude in 2022.

The Community Foundation says the proposal must still gain approvals from several state and federal government regulators. The bridge will be part of a network of trails in the old industrial flats and downtown that the city is calling the Heritage Hydro Trailway. Construction is under way for another river crossing on an old railroad trestle at Lawe Street.