A draft master plan compiled by the Portland Parks Bureau
proposes significant changes that would alter the appearance and use of the city’s historic South Park Blocks. After several months of under-the-radar
planning by consultants and a citizen advisory committee, the public finally
gets a chance to weigh in – but only online at this time.
Citizen comments offered by June 29 conceivably could affect the final plan. A current
schedule calls for a final version to be presented to the City Council for
possible approval in August or September.
Details of the draft are available at the following link, which includes a link to a Surveymonkey questionnaire afterward:
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/2aa14af546b543d99225798af7c367ae
Details of the draft are available at the following link, which includes a link to a Surveymonkey questionnaire afterward:
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/2aa14af546b543d99225798af7c367ae
Planners working on the project are fond of saying the draft
maintains historic characteristics of the much-loved 12-block park, but they do not describe what they believe to be historic elements in any detail. The result of the draft plan suggests a much more cluttered landscape and potential conflicts with bicyclists.
As it stands, the draft plan would seriously impair what
some park lovers believe to be the park’s historic fabric. These proposed changes include removing of several
dozen deciduous trees, adding a removable tensile canopy over much of one block
on the Portland State University campus, and planting conifers at the park’s southern border.
More puzzling yet would be slicing off 5 percent of the
parks square footage along several blocks to create bike lanes for the Green
Loop bicycle route, despite the city’s well-known difficulty of blending bikes
in a pedestrian space at Waterfront Park.
The “good” news is that the plan calls for keeping the
park’s historic canopy of deciduous trees that have shaded the park in summer
and allowed natural light in the winter. However, the plan calls for removing
the center row of the five straight rows that have existed at the park since it
was first planted in 1877.
Laurie Matthews, a horticulturalist working for the MIG
consulting firm, said removing the center row
would allow more room for the remaining trees to reach maturity. “We really heard strong support for
maintaining the tree canopy,” she said.
Matthews also recommended blending more species into the mix
with the numerous American elms, but she did not specify what those could
be. “American elms are very special. Not many species have that special
characteristic.” She said 6 to 10 other
kinds of trees might be suggested later.
An inventory made by committee of the Downtown Neighborhood
Association that wants to save the park’s historic qualities concluded that the
new landscape plan would take out 68 existing trees. That amounts to just over 20 percent of the existing stock.
The tensile canopy held up by poles at PSU essentially would
be more permanent than a tent but less permanent than a building. “Permanent structures are definitely
something we were told to stay away from,” said Rachel Edmonds, an MIG project
manager. The canopy would provide
protection for the farmers’ markets during rainy seasons, but such a “roof” has
no precedence in the park’s history.
Although the draft plan maps are not easy to interpret, it
appears that 5 feet would be removed from the west side of the blocks from
Montgomery to Salmon Street to provide room for bike lanes that also would
extend slightly into the current 9th Avenue right-of-way. The five feet at the western edges of those
blocks currently are paved with hexagonal pavers for pedestrians. Matthews said those walkways “are not very
useable” and that most pedestrians prefer to use the center-block routes.
Nevertheless, no portions of the park’s 100 by 200 foot
blocks have ever been dedicated to vehicular access.
The draft plan also suggests closure of Madison Street
within the park, creating space for a “flexible programmable plaza” in the
former street right-of-way. The tentative
plan also suggests “an overhead sculpture as a place-making feature” for the
plaza that would attract attention and signify the plaza as a gathering space,
close to entrances of the Portland Art Museum and Oregon Historical Society.
“I think that can actually bring people to our front door,”
said Andrew VanDerZanden, an OHS employee who sits on the advisory
committee. Historically, the grassy,
tree-covered park provided quiet spaces for pedestrians and flexible open
spaces for occasional public events. It
was never intended to be a revenue-generating asset.
If people value the park for the green open spaces it
provides, this is a good time to make that appreciation known.
Has anyone considered just leaving it alone?
ReplyDeleteIt says that you "reply as:", and shows your e-mail address. Apparently that doesn't work.
DeleteI'm Garey Fouts and I really want the Park Blocks left alone.
I'm not sure what you mean, Garey. I can add you to my email list if you're willing to give me an address.
Deletegood point unknown
ReplyDeleteI love the South Park blocks just as they are. Do not cut trees unless they are not healthy. Get 2 more opinions from other arborists.
ReplyDeleteDo not plant conifers: they reduce light levels; cones and needles are messier than leaves. Instead of taking space for bike lanes, just close the street on the east side of the park blocks to increase area for walking and cycling. For safety of pedestrians and cyclists, do not permit motorized scooters to use the cycling/walking areas.
Leave South Park alone. It should stay how it is.
ReplyDeleteLeave the beautiful Park Blocks and its trees alone. Whatever the proposed budget is for making changes would be much better spent on maintenence, cleanliness and security of all our city parks.
ReplyDeleteLeave the beautiful Park Blocks and its trees alone. Whatever the proposed budget is for making changes would be much better spent on maintenence, cleanliness and security of all our city parks.
ReplyDeleteLeave this historic cultural place alone.
ReplyDeleteThis is a solution in search of a problem. This plan will look dated in 5-10 years. Keep the Park Blocks as they are now. They will always be classic.
ReplyDelete