Port Barre Park

Port Barre Park is a well-maintained community park featuring walking paths, playgrounds with up-to-date equipment, basketball courts, and large open lawn spaces under the shade of huge old oak trees. It offers amenities such as picnic pavilions with tables and power, a water playground (currently under repair), and ample seating and trash facilities. The park is family-friendly, wheelchair accessible with parking, and accommodates dogs. It provides a clean environment suitable for all ages and fosters community enjoyment with features like a splash pad for cooling off in hot weather.
Reviews
Josh and I went here to the splash pad
Was fun. Not many people. Great for a hot day to cool down.
Thanks for having allowed children to play in this beautiful park on good Friday. It’s clean, adapted to all ages, with shadow and trash cans. we really had a good time and a good break before to drive again
it was clean and well kept. The equipment seemed a bit dated, but the mulch couldn’t be more than a day old. No public restrooms, only porta potties.
Very nice place. Huge old oak tree.up to date playground equipment with basketball courts.
Camera surveillance galore, but there are walking paths, a playground, three different pavilions with tables, power, a water playground which is under repair, a baseball field attached to it and plenty of open lawn space. Also a basketball court. It’s Louisiana and there’s problems with water drainage and it’s a little bit outdated, but how great to have a park.
There is a monument about Charles Odin DeJean III who was in the Vietnam war which kind of displaces some of the Vietnam war scene into the park and I guess I’m wondering what things did Charles like about his life in the states in about the town might be more interesting than concreting the story about war and violence? I’m a Buddhist and Vietnamese Buddhist suffered from the Communist regime in Vietnam also and there was some soldiers in Vietnam from the states which befriended the Vietnamese Buddhist because of it, still, I think maybe it is best to carry into the future what we would like to see, peace and harmony.