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Post by Jack Malloy on Apr 9, 2009 19:33:30 GMT
Williamsburg's Botanical Garden is renowned across the city for it's serene atmosphere, a place for the denizens of this bustling, grimy industrial town to relax and enjoy the occasional nice day without fee or worry.
Now, the tranquility, if not the crowds, are still present. Its little faux woods and wide, treelined paths are the only places you're likely to hear birdsong in the City, but that was largely true before the Outbreak.
It is split in quarters, with a path running from the North Gate to the South Gate, and another from the East Gate to West Gate, joining in a central junction where there is the Civic Fountain, a memorial to important historical figures in Williamsburg's history, and once were small market stalls - the few that remain are either destroyed or empty now, however.
The quarters are largely made of up of lightly gradiated hills or small wooded areas, with long expanses of green lawn and the occasional shambling zombie. It is surrounded by a tall metal fence topped with spikes that are more decorative than effective, particularly given the large holes that occur with regularity around its perimeter.
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