May 8, 2026

169. How Phil Hardberger Built a Park, a Land Bridge, and a Wildlife Corridor for San Antonio

169. How Phil Hardberger Built a Park, a Land Bridge, and a Wildlife Corridor for San Antonio
Apple Podcasts podcast player iconYouTube podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconiHeartRadio podcast player iconAmazon Music podcast player iconCastbox podcast player iconRSS Feed podcast player icon
Apple Podcasts podcast player iconYouTube podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconiHeartRadio podcast player iconAmazon Music podcast player iconCastbox podcast player iconRSS Feed podcast player icon

This week on bigcitysmalltown, host Cory Ames tells the story of the Robert L.B. Tobin Land Bridge at Phil Hardberger Park — in a new format for the show. Rather than a traditional guest conversation, this episode is a narrated oral history, recorded in the field at the park itself, weaving together tape from a morning walk Cory took with former Mayor Phil Hardberger and natural resources manager Wendy Leonard.

Just a week or so before this episode was released, a bronze statue of Phil Hardberger was unveiled at the park that bears his name. He is 91 years old and still walks the trails.

The episode covers:

  • How Phil Hardberger promised San Antonio a new park while running for mayor — and spent two years looking for the right land
  • The phone call that led him to a former dairy farm on the north side, never fully clear-cut, 330 acres still largely as nature left it
  • How Wurzbach Parkway split the property in two — and why that became the genesis of one of the most celebrated wildlife bridges in the country
  • The $23 million fight to fund the land bridge, the jury of architects Phil assembled, and the moment he committed to raising $12 million himself
  • How the bridge was engineered — steel girders, three feet of soil, Corten steel walls designed to block sight and sound from 60,000 cars passing underneath daily
  • Why animals began crossing before construction was even finished — and how within one year, all 31 mammal species known to inhabit the park had been documented using it
  • What Wendy Leonard has learned managing the bridge's natural systems, and why the vegetation hasn't always cooperated
  • How the land bridge reconnected a wildlife corridor stretching to the Salado Creek Greenway — and brought painted buntings back to the park

RECOMMENDED NEXT LISTEN:

168. More Than Parks: How San Antonio Is Building Trails, Gardens, and Green Space Into a Growing City — A Creative Futures panel on green equity, urban nature, and the push to integrate green spaces into every corner of a fast-growing city. Essential context for this conversation.

…..

GET THE NEWSLETTER

🗺️ If you enjoyed this conversation, subscribe to The San Antonio Something — Cory's newsletter with few things worth your attention about the city we call home. Things to do, taste, read, notice, and consider. Thoughtful, grounded, and unapologetically local.

Subscribe here.

-- --

CONNECT

📸 Connect on Instagram

🔗 Join us on LinkedIn

🎥 Subscribe on YouTube

SPONSORS

🙌 Support the show & see our sponsors

THANK YOU

⭐ Leave a review on Apple Podcasts

⭐ Rate us on Spotify