The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Residents appeal to save Grant Park trees

About 75 trees to be removed to build parking garage.

- By Becca J.G. Godwin Becca.Godwin@ajc.com

Cardboard signs atop metal stands — the kind often used for demonstrat­ing loyalty in political campaigns — have popped up all over an Atlanta neighborho­od in recent weeks.

But instead of touting a candidate’s name, the message states, in all capital letters: “Save the trees of Grant Park.”

The signs are part of a campaign started by Leigh Finlayson and his wife, Teresa, to oppose the current proposal for a $48 million, 1,000space parking garage for the park and Zoo Atlanta. The couple has primarily selffunded about 50 signs, giving them out to neighbors to draw attention to the issue.

Plans for the semi-undergroun­d Grant Park Gateway, announced by Mayor Kasim Reed in April, include a restaurant, outdoor greenspace and a way to harvest rainfall. But they also require the removal of about 75 healthy trees — which the city says will be replaced — that stand interspers­ed through the current parking

lot on the park’s Boulevard side.

Finlayson, a criminal defense attorney who has lived in the neighborho­od for nearly 30 years, understand­s some trees will have to go. But, he says, the city has been “inflexible” about adjusting the location or size of the structure to minimize tree loss.

After the city received preliminar­y approval to remove the trees, the Finlaysons submitted an appeal, co-signed by another pair of neighbors, to the Atlanta Tree Conservati­on

Commission — a citizen board appointed by the city to decide appeals of officials’ decisions related to trees. The appeal included a list of the trees marked for removal, such as dogwoods, willow oaks, red maples, and their estimated ages. Teresa Finlayson believes about 25 of them are at least 50 years old, with a couple older than 90.

The city’s efforts to bring a new parking deck to the area are appreciate­d, the July 11 appeal letter said, but, “we must object and appeal the recent proposal to cut all

those trees currently marked for removal.”

The couple and their daughter set up a table in the park for four hours one Saturday, ultimately collecting about 260 signatures for a petition. They presented it, along with a letter of support from Trees Atlanta, at the Aug. 16 appeal hearing.

The commission upheld the Finlaysons’ appeal and asked city officials to demonstrat­e they’d done everything possible to save trees.

The Department of Parks and Recreation “met on numerous occasions” with Finlayson to address his concerns and with the community over a two-year planning period, a city spokeswoma­n said.

“One hundred percent of these trees will be replenishe­d, inch-for-inch, back into Grant Park,” the spokeswoma­n said. “We will make maximum effort to protect our tree canopy while meeting the project’s objectives and commitment­s.”

Throughout the appeal, the nonprofit Grant Park Conservanc­y has remained neutral.

“GPC continues to collaborat­e with the city for the best interests of the park and the community, and we have great respect for park neighbors exercising their civil process to advocate for the park,” a newsletter from the conservanc­y said.

Finlayson said he blames most of the parking deck plan on Zoo Atlanta, as it will be “far more of a benefit to the zoo” than the park.

The establishm­ent, which has one of the smallest footprints among major zoos in the United States, is expanding and retrofitti­ng the former Cyclorama building into an events center. The expansion is expected to require additional tree removal.

Zoo Atlanta has said it supports the city’s project and that it will benefit the entire Grant Park community.

“We are confident that the city of Atlanta and the members of the community can work together toward a solution that will benefit everyone,” a zoo spokeswoma­n said.

The zoo, the mature trees found across the 131-acre park and events such as the long-running Summer Shade Festival are part of the historic park’s draw.

Finlayson hasn’t seen the city’s new plans, but doubts they’ll be significan­tly different from the original ones.

His family has lived directly across the proposed site, and a giant old water oak that Finlayson says could be the “poster child of Grant Park,” since 1998. The couple has already thought about what they’ll do if their efforts to save the trees along Boulevard fail.

Finlayson will probably climb up a tree in his yard to take pictures and “watch as they go down,” he said. His wife, Teresa, will choose not to watch.

City officials will be at the Grant Park Recreation Center, located at 537 Park Ave. SE, from noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday to discuss the tree replacemen­t plan and answer questions, according to the conservanc­y.

 ?? DAVID BARNES / DAVID.BARNES@AJC.COM ?? The Grant Park Gateway Project aims to alleviate traffic and address a lack of parking by constructi­ng a new parking garage near Zoo Atlanta on Boulevard Avenue. A couple who has lived in the neighborho­od for nearly 30 years are trying to prevent the...
DAVID BARNES / DAVID.BARNES@AJC.COM The Grant Park Gateway Project aims to alleviate traffic and address a lack of parking by constructi­ng a new parking garage near Zoo Atlanta on Boulevard Avenue. A couple who has lived in the neighborho­od for nearly 30 years are trying to prevent the...

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