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City Land Swap Deal Would Expand Picturesque Park

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Stoney Point park, a picturesque outcropping of sandstone rocks that has become one of the city’s most popular climbing and filming sites, would be expanded by 54 acres under a land swap deal approved Tuesday by the Los Angeles City Council.

Under the proposal, the 22-acre park near Topanga Canyon Boulevard, a quarter-mile south of the Simi Valley Freeway, would more than triple in size by adding the undeveloped land north of the park.

“If this works out, it’s a win-win situation for everyone,” said Francine Oschin, an aide to Councilman Hal Bernson who proposed the land swap.

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Environmentalists and rock climbers hailed the decision as a major move toward preserving open space in the northwest San Fernando Valley.

“It’s very good news because we have seen a lot of encroachment and development on land south of the park,” said Randy Vogel, an Irvine-based attorney and avid rock climber at Stoney Point park.

“I think it is a victory and certainly I hope the city doesn’t develop it to death” said Jill Swift, a Sierra Club activist and former city parks commissioner who fought to preserve Stoney Point park. “I hope they don’t add a bunch of picnic tables and stuff because once it’s gone, it’s gone forever.”

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Oschin said there are no plans to develop the land.

The park is a little more than a grouping of boulders that are perched precariously on a 300-foot-high summit. Nearby trails snake around trees, sagebrush and boulders.

It has become a favorite for rock climbers from across the country because it offers a variety of challenges.

It has also become a favorite filming site for crews seeking unusual rock formations or desert backdrops within driving distance of downtown Los Angeles.

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The 54 acres adjacent to Stoney Point park is owned by the Valley Christian Presbyterian Church in Arleta, which had been considering using the land for a new church. But city officials, led by Bernson, who represents the area, have instead persuaded the church to look at another site and to sell the land to the city.

“We’ve been trying to put this deal together for a long time,” he said.

Bernson said the deal began to come together when officials discovered that the city had 14 acres of undeveloped land near Corbin Avenue and Rinaldi Street in Chatsworth that they believed could be exchanged for the 54 acres near the park.

The city was planning on developing the 14 acres as a park.

In addition to the 14 acres, the church has asked for $2 million in exchange for the 54 acres, according to city parks officials.

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