The Mercury News

Guadalupe River Park center gets needed care

- Contact Sal Pizarro at spizarro@ bayareanew­sgroup.com.

The Guadalupe River Park and Gardens visitor and education center on Coleman Avenue is showing off some colorful pop that pays tribute to the area’s wildlife with a new 5,500 square-foot mural created by design and architectu­re firm Gensler.

You might recall that the brick building — also home to the Guadalupe River Park Conservanc­y office — was in sorry shape last summer before a team of volunteers weeded the area around it, spruced up the native plants, restored the sign out front and gave the building a new paint job.

But Christine Laing, a principal at Gensler’s San Jose office, says the muted color beigeand-green scheme allowed the building to recede into the background, hardly creating a great first impression for visitors or conveying the conservanc­y’s mission to bring people and nature together. “We’ve brought in a few of the fun and local wildlife that inhabit the adjacent river. In short, the mural speaks volumes about the advocacy and edu

cation happening at the GRPC; it’s a friendly and fun learning zone for the kids,” Laing said.

The mural wraps around the building, covering most of the beige with blue, yellow and green sections, as well as gray images of salmon, ducks and other birds. The actual painting of the mural was a big team effort — with San Josebased Brush House art and design translatin­g the mural onto the building, McCarthy Building Companies providing installati­on resources and Valdez Painting priming the building and donating paint and other supplies.

The end result, incidental­ly, may well be San Jose’s biggest example of paint-by-numbers art. After the mural was outlined on the visitor center, it was coded with a number scheme that allowed more than 50 volunteers from Gensler and McCarthy to work on it over a two-week period in May.

And while the visitor’s center remains closed because of COVID-19 restrictio­ns,

people will certainly be able to find it when it reopens.

VIRTUAL SUCCESS >> The Children’s Discovery Museum’s Legacy for Children gala may have been online this year, but it was still an engaging success for the San Jose institutio­n. More than 160 people joined in Thursday evening for the

virtual ceremony, which

honored music educator Roberta Guaspari and included a performanc­e by Black Violin, a string duo that plays a hybrid of classical and hip-hop music.

Donors contribute­d more than $53,000 to the iconic Purple Museum during the event, and that’s just part of the $1.4 million raised by Children’s

Discovery Museum’s board of directors. That money will help cover admission revenue lost during the 391 days the museum was closed from March 2020 until this spring.

STUDENT SUPPORT >> Chi Am Circle — a nonprofit created by Asian American women in Silicon Valley — has been providing scholarshi­ps to Santa Clara County students for 45 years but really outdid itself this year, awarding a record $119,000 to 41 students. The scholarshi­p winners were celebrated during a Zoom event June 13, which included an inspiring keynote from Kristi Yamaguchi, the Olympic figure skating champ and founder of the Always Dream Foundation.

Meanwhile, a new scholarshi­p program at Menlo-Atherton High School also found itself with a lot to celebrate. The Ubuntu Scholarshi­p Program, which was establishe­d in 2020, had planned to award two $5,000 scholarshi­ps to graduating AfricanAme­rican seniors, but it was actually able to do a bit more than that.

Supporters provided enough funding to grant three scholarshi­ps, as well as one-time $1,000 awards to two other finalists. The $5,000 honorees are Ja Corey Stewart, Daujae Degraffenr­eed, and Keilee Shepard, with Eric Stuart and Kayli Smith receiving $1,000 awards. If you’re interested in finding out more about the program or contributi­ng, email MABearsUbu­ntu@gmail. com.

 ?? PHOTO BY SAL PIZARRO — STAFF ?? Design firm Gensler’s paint makeover added some needed vibrancy to the Guadalupe River Park and Gardens visitor and education center on Coleman Avenue in San Jose.
PHOTO BY SAL PIZARRO — STAFF Design firm Gensler’s paint makeover added some needed vibrancy to the Guadalupe River Park and Gardens visitor and education center on Coleman Avenue in San Jose.

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