Los Angeles Times

An urban oasis blossoms in L.A. after 16 years of delays

A state park in the historic heart of the city is set to celebrate its grand opening.

- By Louis Sahagun

Community activists won a victory in 2001 when an abandoned downtown rail yard slated to become an industrial center was instead sold for use as a park in the historic heart of Los Angeles.

They’ve been waiting ever since for an urban oasis to blossom on the 32-acre site sandwiched between Chinatown and the Los Angeles River and surrounded by neighborho­ods that have been ports of entry for L.A.’s immigrant population­s for nearly two centuries.

Stalled in the budgeting and constructi­on stages for 16 years, the new Los Angeles State Historic Park will celebrate its grand opening Saturday.

On Monday, Sean Woods, superinten­dent of the park, gave an approving nod to crews pruning trees and sweeping walkways in preparatio­n for the event.

“Beautiful, isn’t it?” he said. “You’re looking at a new place downtown for public gatherings, flying kites, kicking a ball and just getting away from it all. It’s also a center for pondering the city’s dynamic cultural history — warts and all.”

The site is where a Spanish expedition­ary force led by Capt. Gaspar de Portola forded the river in 1759 and set up a base camp near

the Native American village of Yang-Na.

Across the land ran the Zanja Madre, a web of brick and mortar conduits fed by a large water wheel that carried irrigation water in the young city.

Entombed in dirt and time are remnants of a passenger station built in 1876 to serve the newly arrived Southern Pacific Railroad.

A few blocks away, racial tensions came to a head when, on Oct. 24, 1871, a mob of 500 whites killed 19 Chinese men and boys, 15 of them by hanging. Known as the Chinese Massacre, the killing rampage prompted newspapers across the nation to liken Los Angeles to a bloodstain­ed Eden.

Old-timers in the area remember when developers and city officials in the 1950s forced more than a thousand families out of Chavez Ravine, just north of the park, to build the stadium where the Dodgers now play.

In the 1990s, the site became a battlegrou­nd of lawsuits, frustratio­n and anger over the city’s plan to transform it into an industrial and warehouse center. Yielding to pressure from a group of environmen­talists and community activists called the Chinatown Yard Alliance, Gov. Gray Davis in 2001 authorized California State Parks to acquire the land.

Now it is an expanse of 1,500 trees, grassy hills, picnic areas and wildlife habitat built with $20 million in voter-approved Propositio­n 40 bond funds as a centerpiec­e of downtown enhancemen­t.

Some politician­s and urban planners see the park, about a 10-minute walk from City Hall, as a model for solving land use battles in metropolit­an areas statewide.

“It’s not New York’s Central Park,” George Yu, executive director of the Chinatown Business Improvemen­t District, said during a tour of the grounds, “but it’s central to us as Angelenos.”

Elva Yanez, a state parks commission­er, added: “There’s a lot riding on this park’s success. If all goes according to plan, it could spark more investment in similar projects throughout the state.”

A state-sponsored network of trained local supporters has been spreading the word at schools, community centers and churches, and fielding concerns that the new park will draw new residents to the area, pricing low-income neighbors out of their homes.

Among these supporters is Deborah Miller, 40, a mother of five who lives nearby.

“I’ve been handing out f liers and telling everyone I can, ‘Come check us out,’ ” Miller said. “This park is beautiful, I tell them, it was made for us.”

The park has helped inspire a wave of developmen­t around its perimeter: a gym, a brewery, restaurant­s and housing. State parks officials are trying to secure funding for a second phase of developmen­t at the park that will include pedestrian bridges linking it to a nearby Gold Line station.

“Everywhere you look, there are signs of gentrifica­tion with a capital G,” said Connie Vuong, a trained park supporter living in Chinatown who formerly worked for a foreign investment firm.

Lauren Bon, an artist and director of the Annenberg Foundation, one of the world’s largest family philanthro­pic organizati­ons, is seeking permission to build a 70-foot water wheel to draw water from the river and feed a network for irrigating nearby green spaces, including the park.

“The opening of this park is only the beginning,” Woods said. “Our goal is to exist as a ref lection of the living, palpable procession of cultural and natural changes in the beating heart of one of the great cities on Earth.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Christina House For The Times ?? THE 32-ACRE Los Angeles State Historic Park is sandwiched between Chinatown and the Los Angeles River. The park’s grand opening is Saturday. Above, George Yu, left, and Connie Vuong of the Chinatown Business Improvemen­t District visit the park Monday.
Photograph­s by Christina House For The Times THE 32-ACRE Los Angeles State Historic Park is sandwiched between Chinatown and the Los Angeles River. The park’s grand opening is Saturday. Above, George Yu, left, and Connie Vuong of the Chinatown Business Improvemen­t District visit the park Monday.
 ??  ?? QUOTES from community members are wrapped around fruit trees at the park by Winter Jenssen, left, and Christian Lopez.
QUOTES from community members are wrapped around fruit trees at the park by Winter Jenssen, left, and Christian Lopez.
 ?? Photograph­s by Christina House For The Times ?? CALIFORNIA POPPIES in bloom Monday at Los Angeles State Historic Park. About a 10-minute walk from City Hall, the park is an expanse of 1,500 trees, grassy hills, picnic areas and wildlife habitat built with $20 million in voter-approved Propositio­n 40...
Photograph­s by Christina House For The Times CALIFORNIA POPPIES in bloom Monday at Los Angeles State Historic Park. About a 10-minute walk from City Hall, the park is an expanse of 1,500 trees, grassy hills, picnic areas and wildlife habitat built with $20 million in voter-approved Propositio­n 40...
 ??  ?? A PIECE by L.A. artist Anna Sew Hoy at the park. Some politician­s and planners see the park as a model for solving land use battles in metropolit­an areas.
A PIECE by L.A. artist Anna Sew Hoy at the park. Some politician­s and planners see the park as a model for solving land use battles in metropolit­an areas.

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