Heisler Park plan almost complete
Andrew Edwards
A conceptual Master Plan to keep Heisler Park in top shape could be
ready for the city in a little over a month.
“It will be late May or early June,” Asst. City Manager John
Pietig said.
City planners and consultants are still hammering out the details
of the plan, which would address ongoing concerns such as erosion of
the park’s coastal bluffs and access to the beach.
The plan is intended to chart a course for park improvements over
the next 50 years, Pietig said.
The park, which is just north of Main Beach, is home to Picnic
Beach, the Heisler Park Lawn Bowling Club and the tide pools of
Rockpile Beach.
At a workshop on Tuesday, Larry Steinle, a consultant with L.A.
Studios, led a presentation on options available to preserve the
long-life of the park.
The total cost of park improvements over time could range from
$3.5 to $4.5 million, Steinle said.
The city will seek grants to fund the improvements, Pietig said,
noting half of the $450,000 cost of the Master Plan itself is being
paid for by a grant from the Coastal Commission.
Steinle and other consultants outlined an array of ideas to
protect the park, such as halting erosion that threatens the stairs
and walkway by Rockpile Beach.
“Natural erosion created those bluffs, we just don’t want to
increase it by letting water and people and plants pull it down. We
want it to be there as long as it can,” Steinle said after his
presentation.
In general, various ideas to preserve Rockpile Beach involve the
construction of some form of seawall, which Steinle referred to as a
bulkhead.
The idea of a bulkhead, Steinle said is to prevent soil from
slipping into the ocean.
However, the idea to build a wall was met with skepticism by Rick
Wilson, chairman of the Laguna Beach chapter of the Surfrider
Foundation. Though the foundation has not taken a formal position on
any proposals, Wilson said installing a wall could result in the
unwelcome consequence of losing the beach.
Wilson said the foundation generally opposes plans for what he
called “armoring the coast,” saying that as the ocean rises toward
the coast, natural erosion preserves the beach as the water advances
inland.
If a wall prevents natural erosion, Wilson said, existing beaches
can end up submerged below the surface.
“This is probably going to end up being debated a lot,” Wilson
said.
Among ideas to enhance access, Steinle discussed options to
improve ramps leading to Picnic Beach by making them less steep.
Of two proposals to lessen the steepness of the ramp, Steinle said
the city would probably not accept an idea that would make the ramp
fully usable for the disabled since a significant amount of grass
would have to be paved over.
“I don’t think anyone’s going to take away half the park to get
[Americans with Disabilities Act] access to the beach,” he said after
the presentation.
Recommendations for a Heisler Park master plan could be discussed
by the City Council as early as May 18.
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