Parking News
Fort Worth Botanic Garden entrance will be temporarily detoured

The Fort Worth Botanic Garden has a situation going on with its entrance but rest assured, the living museum located at 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd is still very much open.
The situation is that its main entrance is temporarily closed due to construction on University Drive. They expect this will be ongoing for approximately six weeks.
During that time, they're opening a second entrance — the Trail Drive gate around the corner, accessible via University Drive and Montgomery Street.
The construction is a project by the city of Fort Worth, for a very non-sexy item: They're installing a storm drain down University Drive, along the passage between I-30 and Trail Drive — which is exactly where the FWBG's entrance is located.
The project, which began on June 4, will reduce University Drive from its current configuration to two lanes in each direction (northbound and southbound) during the construction period.
The center turn lane will be completely removed and rebuilt as part of the project. This removes access to the main entrance gate.
Entrance to the Fort Worth Botanic Garden FWBG
Luckily for the FWBG, they have the alternate gate on Trail Drive.
"Typically we don't keep that gate open but it still gets you the same access to the parking lot," says Emma Birkhead, FWBG's Director of Guest Experience..
Those coming to the facility from I-30, which would be northbound on University Drive, will pass the big sign with the iconic clock flower bed, and keep going another 100 feet to Trail Drive, then take a left at Will Rogers Auditorium and Dickies Arena, and make a left into the gate.
Traffic control for the duration of construction will be managed by the City’s contracted construction company, and electronic reader boards will be deployed by the City to assist with traffic flow. Directional signage will be placed along Trail Drive to guide visitors to the appropriate entrance.
The entrance situation is topical because the Fort Worth Botanic Garden is still seeing many visitors, even well into June, Birkhead says.
"Our peak season is usually March-April-May, and we're coming down off of that a little but it hasn't yet gotten so hot to where we're seeing less guests," she says.