November-December 2009

Restoring a Link to Nature

On the fast track with South Los Angeles Wetlands Park

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This Avalon Boulevard area in South Los Angeles will be transferred into a wetland park.

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By David C. Richardson

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Transferring ownership of the MTA yard to the Department of Sanitation, Tam says, would solve a lot of problems. “It would deal with water quality, and the neighborhood would get open space.” And with the city’s help in finding an alternative site for the transit operations, the MTA would benefit from a smooth transition to a new location. “So it works out for everyone.”

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Favorable Impressions

Neighborhood residents had already developed a favorable impression of the wetland park concept through recent experience. About a five-minute drive from the proposed South Los Angeles Wetland site, a small wetland, also championed by council member Perry, operates on 1.5 acres of the Augustus F. Hawkins Park.

As in the case of the South Los Angeles Wetlands, this park, too, had been recovered from an industrial site, albeit more than a decade ago. The wetland feature was added in 2001 to enhance the park’s appeal, and Perry says it has proven a very popular draw for residents.

More than half of the quasi-industrial site was covered with concrete.

Though the wetland at Hawkins Park treats only the runoff from the park’s 4.5-acre footprint, Perry says that as a demonstration project it performs a role in educating the community on water-quality issues while building public support for stormwater initiatives. It has also enabled the technical leap to the South Los Angeles Wetlands Park project, which, by contrast, will treat not only the runoff from its own 9-acre footprint, but also a portion of the runoff from the 525-acre tributary watershed of the surrounding community.

Drilling Down
Upon the approval of the Citizens Oversight Advisory Committee, the concept reports completed by the city were forwarded to Psomas Engineering to begin preliminary design work.

Vargas says the firm’s experience with bond-funded sustainability programs allowed it to “step in seamlessly and act as an extension of the city for stormwater-related projects.” This arrangement, he says, “allows the firm to do anything from administrative support to construction management—basically whatever they need us to do, they can hire us as experts.”

The obvious place to start was to go out and survey the site. “It was a pretty involved effort,” says Vargas—which included geotechnical exploration, environmental exploration, topographic surveys, boundary surveys, and title report research—“just so we could know everything that we could know about the site.”

He says the utility mapping effort was a critical early piece that had to be done in advance of some of the geotechnical work, “because you don’t want to be drilling down and breaking a utility line.”

The use of the site as a transit facility dates back to 1901, when it serviced the city’s fleet of trolley cars. These deep historical roots posed a challenge for the site survey team. “For something that was built in the last 10 years or so, you would have the ‘as built’ documentation to refer to,” says Vargas. “You could pull up the drawings, and they would indicate to you exactly how it was built. You might also survey manhole lids and handhole pull-boxes, to correlate the recorded plans with what is actually on the ground.” But in this case, because of the age of the installation, there was very little information available.

However, he says, “Invariably, there’s somebody on site who’s been there for 30 years and knows where all the buried bodies are.” And, he adds, thanks to the close partnership between the MTA, the council members’ office, and the other members of the task force, “They knew exactly who to send us to. In fact, he was out there waiting for us when we showed up.” Next Page >

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