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One5 Basketball

5.0 (2 reviews)
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South Olive Park and Community Center - Playground

South Olive Park and Community Center

4.2(5 reviews)
4.6 mi

This is a great park and community center and has many amenities-indoor volleyball, splash pad,…read morebike and walking trails and picnic pavilions. They have a lot of classes and programs and after care. They got a lot of improvements due to a 2020 Parks Bond Referendum. The former beach house that was in poor shape - the old tennis center. 2020, saw new heights - city did it! a new $2 million tennis center and tennis courts that has the South Florida Tennis Program. And there are a ton of tennis players here all the time. It is great to have this park in West Palm Beach! So thank you very much!

The South Olive Park and Community Center has many family friendly amenities. These include a…read moremultipurpose field, basketball court, restroom, benches, gym, picnic pavilions with tables, 2 playgrounds, walking and bike trail, and 4 racquetball courts. The South Olive Community Center provides classes and programs for the south end of Palm Beach as well as after school care. There is also a really fun looking splash pad for the kids. Much needed improvements to the park were provided by a 2020 Parks Bond Referendum. The old tennis center was a former beach house that had been moved to the park and had been in disrepair for years. In 2020, the city broke ground on a 2 million dollar tennis center and tennis courts that host the South Florida Tennis Program. Hundreds of tennis players are drawn to the courts each week. South Olive Park is a great place to take the kids to play or cool off on a hot day but more than that the tennis and community center anchor the community and bring people together for education and recreation. This park is a treasure for the south end.

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South Olive Park and Community Center - Restroom

Restroom

South Olive Park and Community Center - Splash pad

Splash pad

South Olive Park and Community Center - Splash pad.

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Splash pad.

Lincoln Park - Very new and very nice!!!

Lincoln Park

3.7(3 reviews)
4.8 mi

Cute little park with pavilions adjacent to the new Baseball Park…read more My cousin rented a pavilion for her daughters first birthday party. We were near the restrooms & the children's play area at the entrance of the park which was perfect. The pavilions are nice & the bench seating is comfortable. The grill is spacious & allows for convenience while grilling various items. The weather was a lot windier than hoped for which made keeping the flame lit on the grill a lot more difficult but we managed. I did not use the restroom so I cannot currently comment on the cleanliness & upkeep of the parks facilities. However, outside was very clean. No loose trash was apparent in the grass or elsewhere. No graffiti or other unsolicited markings. A few other guests in the park but not a heavy amount of foot traffic. Most people out with their smaller kids. No signs of pets or the parks pet policy, I could have very well overlooked it though. I'd return on the weekend to bike ride in better weather.

Quick: Clean, has stuff for kids, short walking path, bathrooms, good parking, would recommend…read more *** Long: If you're looking for a pretty park (scenery and grassy spots for a picnic), this is not the place, BUT if you want a place to get steps while kids play on the playground or splash pad, THIS IS A GOOD OPTION. The walking circuit is about 0.25 miles if you walk around the central plot of grass and the restrooms. The park was clean and had plenty of parking (two lots) on the day I went, but it is adjacent to a baseball park, so I'm not sure what the parking situation is on a game day. I will definitely be back.

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Lincoln Park
Lincoln Park
Lincoln Park

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Dyer Park - Walkway

Dyer Park

4.6(18 reviews)
6.6 mi

The only reason we stopped here was that there were geocaches here. We immediately recognized that…read morethis must have been a landfill especially since we saw the current one across the highway. They did an awesome job converting this into a park. This should be required of all landfills. Actual hills in Florida - what a rare sight. We understand they have their own olympic cauldron (the flame they use to burn off the methane produced from the landfill). Lots of different sporting uses in this park - biking, walking, soccer, softball, fishing, "mountain biking", etc. Congratulations to whoever made this possible.

For 20 years (1968-1989) trucks hauled trash to the the 445 acre Dyer Boulevard Landfill site until…read moreit finally closed. In April of 1995 the old landfill was turned into a park. The waste authority paid the $5 million to build the park per an agreement they made. They needed to purchase some parcels of land the county did not own from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. The foundation required that once the landfill closed it had to be turned into a park. The waste authority wanted to make the park a showcase of recycling and they used compost, mulch and plastic lumber and other recycled materials wherever possible. A restroom, two baseball diamonds, four soccer fields, a picnic area, lakes for boating and fishing, hiking trails, equestrian trials, and walking paths and a mountain bike challenge course were added to what was once a large modern garbage dump. Most of the park is spread out in between the four garbage hills. All four landfills hills were covered with a plastic liner and topped with two feet of soil and grass. You can see this park from the turnpike. I have often passed it and was intrigued because you never see hills in Florida. Across the street is the landfill that is currently being used. With nothing but time I finally stopped to see what was here. I took the trail from the parking lot to the top of the hill and it ended up being a mile. This was a fun and unique way to work out because it is difficult to find an incline unless you use a gym machine. From the top of the hill you could see people playing on the sports fields down below. All along the trail people were exercising at a safe distance apart. Even so the City of Palm Beach has now closed the park.

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Dyer Park - Fields.

Fields.

Dyer Park - Veteran affair hospital view from the park

Veteran affair hospital view from the park

Dyer Park - The top!

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The top!

Lake Lytal Park

Lake Lytal Park

4.0(4 reviews)
4.1 mi

This is a great park if you like sports or swimming. This very large 70 acre park is open every…read moreday from sunrise to sunset. Next to the entrance are four lighted basketball courts and a small playground structure with baby swings. Around the well marked park you will find 2 lighted baseball fields, 6 lighted multipurpose fields, 2 lighted softball fields and 1 lighted T-ball field. In the center of the park is the Family Aquatic Center where you will find a 50-meter, 8 x 20 lanes heated outdoor swimming pool. There's also a children wading pool, an interactive water playground and a 2 story water tower with 3 slides. There are showers and lockers. Swim classes for children are offered at the aquatic center. To the left of the main entrance are 6 lighted tennis courts and 4 lighted racquetball/handball courts. The park also has a larger playground and a picnic shelter with grills. Near the playground is the Armed Forces memorial. There are 5 flags representing the 5 branches of the armed forces and a monument marker with the names of fallen heroes. Contrary to the name there is no lake view and there are no nature trails which is what I look for in a park. However if you are into athletics this is a wonderful park and the pool is a very nice feature. You can picnic, exercise, and play. This is also a very safe place to teach a child to ride a bike.

Love this pickle ball courts here they are always available for walk ins no reservations needed. A…read moregreat diversity in players from children to seniors. I have never had a snooty encounter here and I appreciate that!

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Lake Lytal Park
Lake Lytal Park
Lake Lytal Park

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Alice Mickens Park

Alice Mickens Park

4.0(1 review)
0.5 mi

Alice Mickens Park is located in the historic Northwest neighborhood in West Palm Beach. In the…read more1920's this neighborhood was booming after WWI and it was made up of impressive homes owned by affluent middle class blacks. One such home was the Mickens house which was a destination of black scholars and intellectuals and visitors who were refused lodging at nearby hotels. These included Count Basie and Louis Armstrong when they were performing in the area. Other notable people who came here to meet with the Mickens family included Nobel Peace Prize laureate Ralph Bunche, Asa Philip Randolph, who organized the first predominantly Black labor union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, and Mary McLeod Bethune, founder of Bethune-Cookman College in Daytona Beach in 1929, who came to West Palm Beach to raise money and persuade the state Legislature to build a home for young Black women who would have otherwise been put in prison. Alice Mickens passed away in 1988 at the age of 99. She lived by the mantra "Service is the price you pay for the stint you have on earth." Alice Mickens was sixth and youngest child of former slaves from South Carolina. Dr. Mickens was born in Bartow, but moved to West Palm Beach at an early age. She was an honors graduate from Spelman College in Atlanta. Later in life Mickens served as a trustee at Bethune-Cookman for more than three decades and received an honorary doctorate from the university. A science lecture hall there is named in her honor. Dr. Alice Mickens may be best remembered as a pioneer for black voting rights. Dr. Moore's 1917 home built by her husband Haley Mickens and which has the distinction of being the oldest home continuously owned by a black and the Northwest neighborhood are both listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Through the years the neighborhood deteriorated but exciting things are happening. The city is in the process of identifying historic structures and drafting plans that include residential spaces and a restaurant. Some of the construction is happening across the street from the park. Alice Mickens Park offers am acre of recreational space in the midst of this historic neighborhood. Park amenities include a shade covered playground with areas for toddlers and older children, a full size basketball court, and benches. This park is the heart of a historic community in transmission. As a champion of historic preservation, I can't wait to see what the next chapter holds.

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Alice Mickens Park
Alice Mickens Park
Alice Mickens Park

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Chillingworth Park

Chillingworth Park

4.0(1 review)
2.1 mi

This 4.1 acre neighborhood park in West Palm Beach was named in honor of Judge Curtis Chillingworth…read morewho was presumed murdered along with his wife Marjorie in 1955. The story of Judge Chillingworth is a fascinating unsolved mystery. In 1921 after serving in the Navy in WWI, Chillingworth came back to West Palm Beach to practice law with his father. He became a county judge at the age of 24. In 1923 he became the newly elected circuit judge in 1923, holding the position for thirty-two years until his disappearance in 1955 at the age of 58. At the time he and his wife Marjorie, 57, were splitting their time between a winter home in West Palm Beach and a summer beach home in nearby Manalapan. The last time the couple were seen alive was at a dinner party on the evening of June 14, 1955. The next day the couple were supposed to meet with a carpenter to build a playground for their grandchildren but they never showed up for the meeting. Inside the house there were bloodstains on the stairs. The police believed the Chillingworth's were kidnapped but the case went cold for 5 years. The mystery began to unravel in 1959 when the people involved began talking. Eventually it was learned that Floyd Holzapfel, a West Palm Beach garage attendant and a pool room operator named Bobby Lincoln murdered the couple in a plan masterminded by corrupt Municipal Judge Joseph A. Peel. Holzapfel eventually confessed the plot. Peel had been accepting bribes and offering protection to criminals. When Judge Chillingworth found out he started making plans to have Peel disbarred. To prevent that from happening Peel orchestrated Chillingworth's murder. It was believed the couple was taken out of the secluded Manalapan house in the middle of the night, driven out to sea, and thrown overboard. Before they drowned the couples last words were of love to each other. Their bodies were never recovered. When it went to trial Lincoln got immunity for his testimony, Holzapfel was sentenced to life in prison, and Peel served 21 years for the crime before dying of cancer 9 days after his release. Upon his deathbed, Peel confessed to the crime. Chillingworth Park is located at Ware Drive and Erie Place between Okeechobee Blvd. and Palm Beach Lakes Blvd. The park is surrounded by homes with walking entry to the park from S. Chillingworth Drive. Park amenities include a paved walkway, pavilion, gazebo, playground, exercise path, basketball court, open play area, and tennis court. In 2019 Chillingworth Park received a new playground. I already knew the sad story of Judge Chillingworth so it was interesting to discover the park that bears his name. The park is very pretty and the only thing it lacks is a restroom. Even though the Chillingworth's were robbed of time with their own grandchildren I think they would be pleased to know that children today are enjoying the park that bears their name.

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Chillingworth Park - Judge Chillingworth lost his life trying to stand up for what is right.

Judge Chillingworth lost his life trying to stand up for what is right.

Chillingworth Park
Chillingworth Park

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One5 Basketball - basketballcourts - Updated May 2026

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