A birthday notice
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Paul Clinton
On the eve of its first birthday, the interpretive center in Upper
Newport Bay is still struggling to find itself -- much like a newly
hatched osprey that has just found its legs.
The nature hub, formally known as the Peter and Mary Muth Interpretive
Center, has not drawn huge crowds. But efforts are underway to publicize
the hidden treasure.
Those efforts are set to get underway shortly, according to Silvia
Marson, a board member of the Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends. The
group raises funds and supplies volunteers to staff the center.
“We have a lot of work to do, getting people to know it’s there,”
Marson said. “The plan would be to encourage groups and individuals to
use it.”
The center’s unusual architectural design -- the building is nestled
in a spot below ground off University Drive -- causes it to blend into
the landscape, rendering it invisible from the street.
The center was designed that way by Corona del Mar architect Ron Yeo.
It opened to the public in October.
“We put it down there so it wouldn’t obstruct anybody’s view” of the
Back Bay, Yeo said. The goal was “to make it one with nature.”
A center instead of a condo
The center was the brainchild of environmentalist Frances Robinson,
who, with her husband, Frank, took on the Irvine Co. in 1969, suing to
stop a complex land transfer from Orange County that would have resulted
in the development of the Back Bay into condominiums and a marina.
As a result of their efforts, the 752-acre estuary was designated as
an ecological reserve. Fran Robinson, who died June 30, had dreamed of a
center to educate the public about what she saw as the bay’s endlessly
fascinating ecosystem of birds, plant life, wetlands and rare coastal
sage scrub habitat.
The center’s exhibition hall is named after the two environmentalists.
The building itself is named for the Muths, a couple who put up $1
million to help build the center.
“They gave what they had, the money,” Frank Robinson said. “And we
gave what we had, the energy and time.”
In many ways, the center faced as many obstacles getting built as the
Robinsons faced in their fight to protect the bay from development.
Preliminary work on the project began in the late 1980s and ultimately
cost almost $8.5 million to complete. It was put on hold during the
county bankruptcy and delayed by the Robinsons’ fight against the county
to stop the extension of University Drive.
A little sensory overload
Walking into the interpretive center’s exhibit hall can lead to
sensory overload. With chirping birds and other lifelike sounds ringing
out in the hall, a series of see-touch-smell exhibits engage the visitor
in a bevy of ways.
There’s an exhibit called “The Wetlands,” in which ordinary household
objects are used to illustrate how the estuary works. A sponge, strainer,
soap and other objects symbolize various functions.
“How is a wetland like an eggbeater?,” a panel teasingly asks.
Pull up the hinged panel and you get your answer: “Tidal action in
coastal wetlands mixes nutrients and oxygen into the water.”
Other exhibits detail the migration patterns of birds during the late
spring through the estuary, the various qualities of wetlands mud, the
smell of coastal sage scrub and other aspects of the reserve.
“You want to make [the exhibits] as interactive as you can so they
form some connection to what they’re looking at,” said Grace Yick, the
senior park ranger at the center. “We’re not trying to spoon feed
information. We’re hoping to spark questions.”
A continuing campaign
The Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends have been on a constant
fund-raising campaign to keep the center’s exhibits fresh, according to
the group’s president, Jack Keating.
The group provides the center with a $100,000 operating budget per
year and $200,000 for capital projects. Keating said the goal is to raise
$1 million.
“That money will go toward rehabilitation of exhibits later on,”
Keating said. “One of the things you notice is the exhibits get a little
seedy sometimes.”
As more people explore the northern end of the Back Bay, where the
center is located, it should get more visitors, Keating said.
Newport Beach Mayor Gary Adams, whose City Council district includes
the center, agrees with that assessment.
“I don’t think a lot of people know about it,” Adams said. “My sense
is it hasn’t become a destination yet.”
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