San Diego Union-Tribune

Encinitas OKs mosaic to celebrate Leucadia

- BARBARA HENRY

An eclectic, funky mosaic design that features found objects and celebrates Leucadia’s history won Encinitas City Council approval Wednesday.

Plans call for 17 panels, a 6-inch tile ribbon and two cairns to decorate the El Portal pedestrian railroad undercross­ing, which opened last year. Elementary students in grades 3-6 at Paul Ecke Central School, which is near the project site, and high school art students from San Dieguito Academy worked together to create the designs.

And, they’ll be continuing to participat­e this summer as the concept work becomes a reality, high school art teacher and project leader Jerm Wright told the council.

Wright, who also was involved in the art project at the Santa Fe Drive freeway undercross­ing, said the El Portal project will have “that same flavor” of diversity in the artwork. As he spoke, several students unrolled paper mock-ups of the proposed designs and marched around the council chambers holding them up for all to see.

The panel images will include a Kumeyaay tribal scene, a flower festival parade from decades ago and the truck-pulled relocation of the former Santa Fe Railroad Station (now the Pannikin cafe).

“All of the tiles will be very strong, weather-proof; it’ll last for years,” said Wright, who runs a ceramic studio at SDA.

Participan­ts’ thumbprint­s are being incorporat­ed into the design, as are found objects that Paul Ecke Central students have been collecting in donation boxes. Because of the diversity of materials, the mosaics will be “very tactile,” Wright promised.

Councilmem­ber Kellie Hinze, who once attended Paul Ecke Central, said she thought the reuse of found objects, such as broken bits of dinner plates, was “so Leucadia.”

This mosaic project has been talked about for years, Hinze said, adding, “I always envisioned that it would be cool, but I didn’t expect it to be this cool.”

Mayor Tony Kranz, a former SDA student who called Wright one of SDA’s finest teachers, said he wanted city staff to create a documentar­y about the project, saying it will be “interestin­g years down the road for people to appreciate what went into it.”

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