Future Los Angeles - River Mastreplan Proposals from Frank Gehry and OLIN
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- Опубліковано 2 лют 2021
- In October 2016 the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors directed Public Works In October 2016 the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors directed Public Works to work with other County Departments to update the LA River Master Plan for the first time in over 20 years. This kicked off a multi-year process, involving dozens of community meetings, thousands of community members, and a diverse Steering Committee to help ensure the plan reflects the diverse interests along the river.
In the midst of current events that include the health pandemic, social justice uprisings, and wildfires worsened by climate change, it is clear the LA River is a critically important, often overlooked, public resource in the County. We want the plan to be comprehensive, thoughtful, and representative of the various community voices as we lay the groundwork for the next 25 years of investment in the river. These investments are not only an engine of economic recovery for the region, they are essential to addressing the disparity within our communities and improving the quality of life and ecosystem health for current and future generations of Angelenos.
We have a vision for the LA River to become 51 miles of connected public open space that provides landmark opportunities to reduce flood risk and improve resiliency, support healthy and connected ecosystems, address potential adverse impacts to housing affordability and people experiencing homelessness, promote healthy, safe clean water, and create jobs while fostering opportunities for arts, culture, and community engagement. These goals have perhaps never been more important than right now and the LA River can help us achieve them.
Specifically, Los Angeles County's 2020 LA River Master Plan identifies opportunities for the following:
Over 200 potential project sites that will create local jobs.
Thousands of acres of publicly accessible open space that will help address public health issues, especially in the most disadvantaged communities.
Innovative multi-benefit projects that assist in mitigating future disasters, such as flooding, drought, and extreme heat events, while enhancing ecosystem function.
Actions for affordable housing and homelessness, a key initiative to address displacement in areas vulnerable to gentrification.
A framework for future community engagement to influence projects built under the plan.
The draft 2020 LA River Master Plan is available below for a 60-day public comment review period.
We know that updating the Master Plan for all 51 miles of the LA River is a huge undertaking and there’s still time to provide your input. We are grateful for you and all the people who have brought their dedication, innovation, and creativity to help guide this effort.to work with other County Departments to update the LA River Master Plan for the first time in over 20 years. This kicked off a multi-year process, involving dozens of community meetings, thousands of community members, and a diverse Steering Committee to help ensure the plan reflects the diverse interests along the river.
In the midst of current events that include the health pandemic, social justice uprisings, and wildfires worsened by climate change, it is clear the LA River is a critically important, often overlooked, public resource in the County. We want the plan to be comprehensive, thoughtful, and representative of the various community voices as we lay the groundwork for the next 25 years of investment in the river. These investments are not only an engine of economic recovery for the region, they are essential to addressing the disparity within our communities and improving the quality of life and ecosystem health for current and future generations of Angelenos.
We have a vision for the LA River to become 51 miles of connected public open space that provides landmark opportunities to reduce flood risk and improve resiliency, support healthy and connected ecosystems, address potential adverse impacts to housing affordability and people experiencing homelessness, promote healthy, safe clean water, and create jobs while fostering opportunities for arts, culture, and community engagement. These goals have perhaps never been more important than right now and the LA River can help us achieve them.
Specifically, Los Angeles County's 2020 LA River Master Plan identifies opportunities for the following:
Over 200 potential project sites that will create local jobs.
Thousands of acres of publicly accessible open space that will help address public health issues, especially in the most disadvantaged communities.
Innovative multi-benefit projects that assist in mitigating future disasters, such as flooding, drought, and extreme heat events, while enhancing ecosystem function.
Actions for affordable housing and homelessness, a key initiative to address displacement in areas vulnerable to gentrification.
A framework for future community engagement to influence projects built under the plan.
This project has overwhelming support from the public I know the river will be restored one day it’s just matter of when.
@
ua-cam.com/video/KYhZwcwtN4k/v-deo.html Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors are full of BULLCRAP !!
i know that L.A. is building a lot of new metro lines, and i love trains, and is also rapidly going verticle, but this is my fav project to look at. I can't wait to see its completion!!!!
This reminds me of the Grand River Restoration Project that's trying to get funding here in michigan. One of the main points of the project is to remove the damn that are in the River so that the rapids can restore to their natural state. Covid derailed some of the progress I believe, but I really hope the plan moves forwards because I really do want to see the River restored to its natural state, plus all of the trails and parks that will be added to the riverside as well.
This is similar to the Madrid Río plan and it has been a success. Wildlife has bloomed and the high and low town barriers have dissappeared
I wish it was true they being say this for over 10yrs they update the plans every 3 yrs but they haven't broken ground at all.
The areas from Griffith Park to Downtown are the only places that I know made improvements along the river but not all at the actual river. New pedestrian Bridge and a huge road bridge and a few parks
There are quite a few stretches where the river has been restored to its semi-natural state. The concrete sides are still in place, to control flooding, but the bottom is natural and supports trees and brush and grasses and wildlife.
They should try to re indroduce the chinook salmon that used to swim in the river
When they said "LA river", I thought they were talking about I-405.
To be honest, it would be really accurate
But like this video lacks a lot of detail. It just repeats the same things for a few minutes.
It's the master plan of people, water, and community. Over and over again
Your logo looks much like the logo or Paris airports operators named "Paris Aéroport"
GET RID OF THE GANGS/CRIME FIRST OR ELSE ITS POINTLESS! FUND THE POLICE!!!...HOUSE THE HOMELESS!
So what are the updates on this project?
Would be awesome to see some of the major sports teams of LA get behind this project with some volunteer workdays and some advertisement endorsements at their stadiums!
Solve homelessness in and around the rivers FIRST!!!
I hope we invest more in this so it can be done faster
This is more of a proposition, it didn’t really go into detail on the specific areas where they say they’re going to replace or add things to the surrounding river area, it reminds me of the high speed rail line that was supposed to connect San Francisco with the rest of Southern California but now isn’t going to be in the LA area at all. I don’t think this “plan” will fully phase out like the way they’re modeling it to be... California and especially the LA has a track record of not keeping up their promises
Oxbows Oxbows Oxbows. This could be really cool. I'm thinking like a Japanese Gardens like they have in Haight Ashbury. If anyone is old enough and Cali OG enough to remember Japanese Deer Park (not the end part 😭). That would be really cool. They could use watershed storage for rec fishing and maybe a different one for RC sailboats. I imagine Oxbows that could incedible little biotopes and even some cultural anthropology that could help educate folks on what LA used to really called and who already had the basin dialed for aquaculture 😉 shout-out to the real Natives 🤙
Maybe you should be focusing all ur efforts and energy on fixing that massive homeless problem.
This is the fix they’ve come up with. Hide them in the LA River parks.
La is too expensive to fix homeless issues. They built some units but cost $400,000 each for land and construction. That money can buy 10 large Midwest homes and house 50 homeless. Millions of empty homes in rust belt states, not sure why not send homeless there. Food, utilities, gas, housing, taxes are cheaper. Not sure why the most expensive cities are best places for homeless to get out. Minimum wage people need two jobs to survive and cram many in a space. Imagine a homeless trying to back to normal life, forget it. There needs to be a national plan to get homeless to cheaper places where they can do jobs like small farms or plant trees, clean national parks.
Do the future of blegium or Europe pleassssssss i love ur videos
Make a video about a brazilian city!!
Sounds like a nice future encampment.
Were Do you get your water
LAs water comes from the Sierra Nevada mountains up north via the California aqueduct.
In the summer the only water flowing down the LA river is the discharge from all the sewage treatment plants. It really should be called the LA open sewer.
@@jamestucker8088 I’ve lived in LA 35 years and that’s not true.
I hope all of LA river gets restored. The current banks wastes 10 mil gallons of water and increases temperatures.
ayo the pzizza here conrazon depacito
Does Los Angeles metro area recycle any of their water? they have what over 13.1 million people? thats a lot of water being used!
It's a storm draim
Knowing California's politics I bet 70% of the Budget for the river restoration was used to pay for this video.
I see Norwalk
Europe is way ahead on these kind of projects as they see them as being essential for cultural adhesion.
Hi. Bitcoin sky rocket above $50k. Start buying cryptocurrencies is good they're a huge help down the road for financial progress.
Great project.BUT ,as always , the city builds ,and the city let's it go to trash .That's the city's Motis operihen ( MO ) .Spend money to make it deteriorate, to later ask for more money to fix it .
La needs more to be more compact and dense + it needs a smart metro system
As long as it doesn't become another MacArthur Park full of junkies
@guatemalantomcat
Nah! Those junkies are useful. They're meat bait for MS-13 especially when walking along 7th Street between Hoover St. and Witmer St.
New home for the homeless
@highjinxwillie62
*homeless transients and vagrants
There is a huge difference. Homeless is too broad.
@@whathell6t all peas in a pod. I was just being nice by using the word homeless
@Estela Lopez Ban drugs LoL, tell that to the homeless
This project cannot move forward until they come up with a plan to divert water during heavy storms, or else all those trees and rocks will get washed away, and caught under bridges creating blockages and flooding. Hopefully they clear out all that debris before the next big rain event.
They forgot to include the communities of tents that will inhabit it
Imagine how beautiful it will be once all the homeless people and the protesters set up their tents and encampments in the area. Win win
It's taken years of almost ruining out of water they still are thinking and planning when all along the bottom line is they let too much water run off in the ocean
I wonder how much more litter will end up in the river cause of this
Less because people will actually be paying attention. Unlike now where people just look the other way.
Can't keep the homeless out then no point wasting the money.
So there was a master plan for the river in the 1990s? What has been accomplished since then? I don't mean to be skeptical but California has a proven track record that fails to progress in a reasonable amount of time on any project. Projects that shouldn't take decades do. A project like this is suppose to take decades, so I'll probably be dead before this is brought even slightly to fruition. I'm currently in my early 20s.
How about water conservation and hydro for efficient energy needs? Sleeping on the potential of the LA river ppl need to wake up practicality escapes ppl
This is a pipedream, the LA river areas are deserted, a few parks and benches here and there cannot revitalize it. Our city was not built along the river, its too widespread to work. This is going to be a complete waste of money just like every other major project they attempt. Instead, give the money back to the people and let them improve their own areas by making them more wealthy.
Fix the homeless problem first...its an embarrassment to the nation
Anyone but Gehry. He’s horrible.