The Signal

Water Agency plans a new ‘theme’ garden

Water Agency members preview interactiv­e garden plans with a focus on resource conservati­on

- By Jim Holt

While recent rains may not have been the “March Miracle” water officials were hoping for, they remain excited about the prospect of transformi­ng the Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency’s huge public garden overlookin­g Central Park into a highly stylized interactiv­e theme park — the theme being water.

Members of SCV Water’s Water Resources and Watershed Committee got a sneak preview of the interactiv­e garden recently when details of the plan were unveiled.

Committee member Bill Cooper called it an “excellent presentati­on,” likening some aspects of it to a “Sea World” experience, entertaini­ng for kids.

Other committee members also praised the proposed Water Conservati­on Garden and Education Experience Project.

BJ Atkins: “Brilliant concept.”

Jerry Gladbach: “I’m in awe of the design.” Doors to the interactiv­e garden — which comes with a price tag of between $3.2 and $3.5 million — could swing open as early as the end of next year.

Between now and then, however, garden designers are expected to tweak their plans, tailoring them to the directives and concerns of the SCV Water board.

They expect to get final approval for the project from the board in early 2023 and finish building it by that fall.

“The board will be ready for it when you’re ready,” Committee Chair Jeff Ford assured the staff.

The mission of the project is simple: Educate the public on the value of water.

“We are excited about the potential for this plan to really give visitors an understand­ing of their place in the interconne­cted water system across the state,” said agency spokeswoma­n Kathie Martin.

The plans are purely conceptual, she noted. “We are in an early stage of the project,” she said. “We are excited, though, to bring new life to our conservato­ry garden, which has been a source of water education for local students for more than 25 years.”

News of the project, on the night of its big unveiling, was refreshing for committee members who had

just finished sitting through an hourlong update on the worst drought in 1,200 years.

Then came the feature attraction — the unveiling of the new garden.

The agency’s Water Conservati­on Specialist Julia Grothe, part of the design team, called the garden’s “general design flow” a “global to state to local water use and conservati­on.”

The interactiv­e garden tells the story of SCV’s water supply in two main exhibits — water brought here from Northern California as part of the State Water Project and water pumped from local aquifers.

Garden visitors exploring the State Water Project exhibit would be able to use an “interactiv­e water and fiber-optic teaching tool” to see how melted snow from the Sierra Nevadas ends up as water delivered to the Santa Clarita Valley.

“You can press a button that models different weather conditions — normal water year, wet year and dry year or drought year,” Grothe said. “This will trigger a valve to open and water to flow through the model with fiber optic lighting the path to show how the water flows through the State Water Project system.”

The second main attraction — the local aquifer exhibit — would allow visitors to look through peepholes and see for themselves how undergroun­d water works in the SCV.

“It’s a topographi­c model of our valley above ground,” Grothe said. “And shows our two aquifers — the alluvial and Saugus Aquifer — undergroun­d.”

Pointing to the aquifer, she said it would be filled with resin “to give the illusion of water while allowing you to peer into the aquifer and see how large it is.”

When the presentati­on finished, garden designers invited questions.

Committee Member Ed Colley had one: He suggested designers rethink their “bee hotel” plans.

“I heard bee hotels and children which concerns me a little bit,” he said. “There are children that are quite allergic to bees so we ought to think hard about that.”

Designers included plans for a bee hotel to illustrate how crucial bees are when it comes to pollinatin­g plants.

The agency’s Sustainabi­lity Manager Matt Dickens, part of the four-member design team, promised to research the bee concern.

“My understand­ing on the bee hotels is that they’re specifical­ly geared towards native bees, which are solitary bees and ground-dwelling bees, so they’re not swarming bees,” he said.

Colley, however, wanted more assurance the exhibit would be safe. “Do these bees that live in the bee hotels sting children?”

“Yes, some species do, some do not,” Grothe told him. “But, generally they are not aggressive.”

She suggested moving the exhibit further back so that kids couldn’t “reach in and touch them.”

“We could create a crisis, needlessly,” Colley said. “So, I’d like us to think hard about that.”

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 ?? Renderings courtesy of the Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency ?? (Top) The rendering depicts a section of the proposed garden where children will learn about the Santa Clarita Valley’s water supply in two main exhibits - water brought from Northern California and water pumped from local aquifers.
(Middle) The rendering shows visitors exploring the garden. According to SCV Water Agency board members, the Water Conservati­on Garden and Education Experience project will educate visitors on different ways to conserve water from learning about drought-resistant species of plants to the very methods the agency uses to supply water to residents.
Renderings courtesy of the Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency (Top) The rendering depicts a section of the proposed garden where children will learn about the Santa Clarita Valley’s water supply in two main exhibits - water brought from Northern California and water pumped from local aquifers. (Middle) The rendering shows visitors exploring the garden. According to SCV Water Agency board members, the Water Conservati­on Garden and Education Experience project will educate visitors on different ways to conserve water from learning about drought-resistant species of plants to the very methods the agency uses to supply water to residents.
 ?? Rendering courtesy of the Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency ?? According to SCV Water Agency members, the interactiv­e garden would cost between $3.2 and $3.5 million and could open as early as the end of next year.
Rendering courtesy of the Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency According to SCV Water Agency members, the interactiv­e garden would cost between $3.2 and $3.5 million and could open as early as the end of next year.

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