Las Vegas Review-Journal

Healing garden to be permanent

Plans call for more elaborate structure

- By Jamie Munks Las Vegas Review-journal

A slatted wood wall in downtown Las Vegas has been the landing place for an outpouring of emotion over the last seven months.

A smiling, close-up photo of Las Vegas shooting victim Heather Alvarado hangs on the wall in a frame ringed with messages written in different handwritin­g: “Love you wifey,” and “I love you mommy.”

It’s one of many pictures and messages that hang next to crosses, dream catchers and other mementos on the temporary remembranc­e wall at the Las Vegas Community Healing Garden downtown.

Plans call for the wall to be replaced by a more elaborate, permanent remembranc­e wall dedicated to the 58 victims of the Oct. 1 shooting on the Las Vegas Strip.

The wall came about organicall­y, as people looked for a place to reflect while volunteers built the garden in the days after the Oct. 1 shooting, said Jay Pleggenkuh­le, who designed the garden.

“We needed a place where people could post, write notes, grieve and share stories,” Pleggenkuh­le said.

Renderings of the new wall show five separate pieces standing at differing heights with backlit text and memorial ▶ reviewjour­nal.com/lvshooting

plaques, arranged in a half-circle next to the garden’s “tree of life.”

Get Outdoors Nevada Executive Director Mauricia Baca said the group, which is contractin­g with the city for ongoing maintenanc­e at the garden, needs to raise $150,000 for the permanent wall.

Local philanthro­pist Gard Jameson has donated $25,000 to the effort, and said Wednesday that the valley’s billionair­es and multimilli­onaires should “step up” their giving to community projects like the healing garden.

“There’s a lot of money here,” Jameson said.

The garden sits on a piece of city property on Casino Center Boulevard. The city launched a Community Healing Fund last year to maintain the garden and public art created in the wake of the shooting. The fund is being managed by the nonprofit Nevada Community Foundation.

Events at the garden since its dedication have drawn hundreds of people, and Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman said she expects it will remain a fixture.

“It will be there for generation­s to come, I’m sure,” Goodman said.

Contact Jamie Munks at jmunks@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0340. Follow @Journo_jamie_ on Twitter.

 ??  ?? City of Las Vegas A rendering of a planned wall to remember victims of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting shows five separate pieces standing at differing heights.
City of Las Vegas A rendering of a planned wall to remember victims of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting shows five separate pieces standing at differing heights.
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