Have You Seen the National Park Service's Redesigned Web Portal Yet?

June 27, 2009

Be sure to check out the redesigned National Park Service website.

Have you seen the National Park Service's new web portal? The redesigned site is cleaner and easier to navigate than the older version.

The upper third of the homepage features a rotating series of gorgeous photographs to whet your appetite for exploring the various nooks and crannies of the National Park System. Alongside this slide show is a box containing "Search" and "Find A Park" functions, while just below this panel you'll find columns containing news items from around the park system, as well as a calendar of events. The bottom third of the page offers multimedia offerings, from videocasts and podcasts to web cams and photo galleries.

All in all it's a nice, clean upgrade from the old monster. But there are a couple of questionable items. For instance, instead of placing a link to "Working with Communities" right under the slide show, why not one to provide folks with information on the various park passes they can buy and where they can buy them? Also, the slide show runs a tad too fast for my taste. Makes it tricky to enjoy the photo and then read the caption before the shot dissolves into the next image.

And while it's probably too soon to tell since this site just debuted, hopefully the Park Service will provide an archive of its multimedia productions for visitors to browse through.

Just as, if not more, important is the need to see this redesign trickle down through the many websites of the National Park System. Not only is a cleaner, more easily navigable collection of sites needed, but there are somewhat questionable, if not embarrassing, aspects to the current collection.

For instance, one of the pages for the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park website offers this curious tidbit:

Don Redman, "the little giant of Jazz," graduated from Storer College in 1920. Until his death in 1964, Redman continued to have a profound influence on the evolution, direction and development of this uniquely American art form.

Couldn't that be better filed with the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park?

Over at the site for Fords Theater National Historic Site you'll find prominent mention of recently made "major renovations," but no details on them.

And while Padre Island National Seashore saw a leatherback sea turtle come ashore to nest last year, the seashore's website states that "leatherback sea turtles are not known to nest currently on Padre Island."

Surf over to the pages for the Fort Bowie National Historic Site in Arizona and you'll find the following bit of national park trivia: Last winter, the coldest temperature inside the Alpine Visitor Center was 21.2 degrees. The snow insulates the building when it is closed for the winter.

Unfortunately, the Alpine Visitor Center can be found not in Arizona but at Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado.

And unless you're an astute student of American history, you'll likely be wondering what war was raging in the spring of 1814 when "General Andrew Jackson and an army of 3,300 men attacked 1,000 Upper Creek warriors on the Tallapoosa River." The answer does not seem to exist on the Horseshoe Bend National Military Park website.

There are other examples, but the point has been made. And what should not be overlooked, either, is that, overall, the NPS websites collectively harbor an incredibly rich collection of information in a variety of presentations. But sometimes it's not always easy to find nor, as evidenced above, properly filed away.

Hopefully the redesign of the Mothership will filter down to the troops.

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