Source: h-bomb via Flickr

Earlier this month we reported on plans by the Parks Department and the National Parks Service (NPS) to introduce more tourist-friendly elements to Jamaica Bay, like bike rentals and food concessions. Now it looks like the Parks Department and the NPS have announced three Requests for Proposals (RFPs) that further detail their plans to attract more visitors via a press release.

The leaders behind this effort cited the success that the Rockaway Beach Club has experienced since their introduction of diverse food carts and offerings.

“We are excited about this opportunity to partner with the City to expand visitor services at our beaches through the wonderful food found in New York City’s mobile food trucks,” said Linda Canzanelli, Superintendent of Gateway National Recreation Area. “Expanded opportunities for biking, canoeing and kayaking are great ways to help everyone experience America’s great outdoors and the wonders to be found around Jamaica Bay.”

The Parks Department and the NPS are seeking food vendors for “a one year term, with three, one year renewal options – exercisable at NYC Parks’ and the concessionaires’ mutual discretion.”

If you have a food truck business and would like to get on the ground floor of the emerging Jamaica Bay tourist scene, the Parks Department and the NPS are accepting proposals to their RFPs right now. Here are the details from the press release.

All proposals submitted in response to these RFPs must be submitted no later than Monday, April 8, 2013 at 3:00 pm. There will be a recommended proposer meeting and site tour on Wednesday, March 20, 2013 at 10:00 am. Meetings begin in the multipurpose room (to the right of the lobby and down the hall) of Gateway National Recreation Area’s Ryan Visitor Center at Floyd Bennett Field, which is located at Aviation Road and Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn.

Hard copies of the RFPs can be obtained, at no cost, through Monday, April 8, 2013 between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., excluding weekends and holidays, at the Revenue Division of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, which is located at 830 Fifth Avenue, Room 407, New York, NY 10065.

The RFPs are also available for download through Monday, April 8, 2013 on the Parks Department website. To download the RFP, visit http://www.nyc.gov/parks/businessopportunities and click on the “Concessions Opportunities at Parks” link. Once you have logged in, click on the “download” link that appears adjacent to the RFP’s description.

For more information or to request to receive a copy of the RFP by mail, prospective proposers may contact Lauren Standke from the Revenue Division of Parks at (212) 360-3495 or at lauren.standke@parks.nyc.gov.

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  • bill

    From the RFP:Menu

    Non-processing items and items requiring limited preparation that are currently sold in parks are listed below along with their prices. The sale of additional items which are not listed below is subject to the prior, written approval of NPS and Parks, as appropriate. The concessionaire will be expressly prohibited from charging higher prices for any of these items unless the concessionaire receives written approval from NPS or Parks; however, the concessionaire may charge a lower price than what is listed: Item Price Hot dogs (10 to the pound) $2.00 Sausage $3.00 Polish sausage $3.00 Pretzels $2.00 Pretzel Dogs $4.00 Specialty pretzels $3.00 Knishes $2.00 Empanadas (Pre-processed) Chicken, Beef or Vegetable $3.00 Milk Chillers $3.00 Regular potato chips $0.50 Pringles $1.00 Apple Chips $1.50 Pirates Booty $1.50 Churros $3.00 Nuts Peanuts $3.00 Almonds $3.00 Cashews $3.00 Pistachios $3.00 Honey roasted nuts $3.00 Coconuts $3.00 All varieties of dried fruit $3.00

    How wonderful this will be available in the Great National Park of New York.

  • pam

    It’s supposed to be a ‘wildlife refuge’… with all that implies. Desperate for money? I can’t understand who and why thinks that introducing humans with their known disregard for the environment (tossing trash where ever they happen to be) is a good idea. Disrupting this refuge by adding recreational water activities is just callous, with no consideration to what damage will occur.
    I will never understand that some people must be consistently entertained… and how they refuse to learn how to sit quietly and observe what’s around them. The refuge will no longer be a refuge if this goes forward.

  • mber

    All of this is to cater to the hipster crowd that has begun to overrun that general area (Rockaways, etc.) in the last couple of years. This will make it 10X worse. What part of “wildlife refuge” do they not get??