Archive for Thursday, April 24, 2008
L.A. City Council plants seeds of urban wetlands
City Council approves project at former MTA yard.
The City Council this week unanimously approved construction of an unusual urban wetland park on an old Metropolitan Transportation Authority maintenance yard in South Los Angeles.
The South Los Angeles Wetlands Park project will cost $19 million in proceeds from bond issues for parks and clean water and will take up to two years to build, city officials said. It will include a small lake, marshes with native plants, footpaths, a community center and a winding waterway.
The nine-acre MTA yard, which stretches from Avalon Boulevard to San Pedro Street in an industrial area on 54th Street, had been used as a transit hub for more than 100 years and was once a train barn for streetcars. The lot is paved and encircled by rusted chain-link fencing and razor wire, “a barren, underutilized concrete pad,” Councilwoman Jan Perry said. Surrounded by homes and schools, the site will make “an ideal locale for green space,” Perry said.
Under the city’s agreement with the MTA, the lot will be cleaned of toxics, then developed as a wetland.
“There is a scarcity of green space here, a lack of places to go and get in touch with nature,” said the Rev. John Deron Johnson, pastor of Phillips Temple CME Church, a supporter of the wetland project.
“It’s got to be a plus for us,” said Clark Coe, 46, a neighbor of the site. Groundbreaking is slated for 2010.
- BMW 335d sedan: Elegant electronics and a gestalt-altering diesel
- Palin ethics lapse cited
- Golden Gate Bridge to get suicide net to catch would-be jumpers
- Armenian clergy worldwide embark on a quest to collect holy oil
- The 'unitary executive' question
- Leland Wong gets 5 years in 'pay to play' corruption scandal
- California takes steps to probe nurses' criminal backgrounds
- House of Blues' image contrasting upgrades on Sunset Strip
- Endorsements so far
- Japanese businessman Kazuyoshi Miura is found dead in jail cell
- Ethics probe hits hardest at Todd, not Sarah Palin
- Bank rescue plan to test capitalism
- A USC victory, yes, but it's no keeper
- Obama rides a wave of bad economic news
- Oregon defeats UCLA, 31-24
- Who's best suited for the White House?
- McCain campaign sees Iowa as still in play
- Josh Brolin takes a run at the president in 'W.'
- Sarah Palin's husband, Todd, was a fixture at governor's office
- John McCain and Sarah Palin try new tactics
