Forces join to revamp library landscape
Barbara Diamond
In a city where officials can’t agree on how to count parking spaces
and civility is fast disappearing from public discourse, one project
seems to have sparked a spirit of cooperation.
Landscaping at the Laguna Beach Library will be overhauled, by the
combined efforts of the city, the county, the Friends of the Laguna
Beach Library, the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce and community
volunteer Steve Kawaratani.
“Working together, we can make this look really nice,” said
landscape designer and Design Review Board chairman Kawaratani, “I
will do a site analysis and design a new plant palette, integrated
with the recent renovation of Forest Avenue, which I also designed.
“The city will supply some of the materials and labor, and the
Friends of the Library and the chamber will raise funds.”
Kawaratani, who is working on the project pro bono, picked up
landscape plans that dated back to 1971 from the library on Tuesday.
“The landscaping was probably installed in conjunction with the
remodel that was completed in 1973,” Kawaratani said. “It needs
freshening and the irrigation system needs to be repaired.”
Friends of the Library President Martha Lydick was outraged to see
standing water in the grooves of an unused bicycle rack when she,
Kawaratani, Friends of the Library Board member Diane Connell and the
city’s Parks and Building Manger Vic Hillstead first reviewed the
site.
“We’ve heard nothing but don’t let water sit around in pots and
breed mosquitoes because of West Nile virus, and here it was at the
library, which is used by children and the elderly, the most
vulnerable to the virus,” Lydick said.
The board of the Friends has long been concerned about the
landscaping at the library and the used-book store, which raises
funds for the library.
“It’s a disgrace,” Lydick said.
Several months ago, the board declined to fund the purchase of a
few plants proposed by library officials.
“It was a waste of money because a major renovation was needed, a
bigger project than the Friends could undertake on its own in
addition to our main mission of buying books for the library,” Lydick
said.
The project as a joint effort, however, is feasible.
“Our board will meet next month to discuss ways to raise funds for
the landscaping project,” Lydick said.
Kawaratani said the Chamber of Commerce is also expected to help
fund the project.
The chamber, next door to the bookstore, gave the county the land
for the library in exchange for free rent in perpetuity.
“One of the first things the chamber board wanted after I was on
board was to have the offices remodeled,” chamber Executive Director
Verlaine Crawford said. “I found out we had to have the county’s
permission. So I contacted the county’s facilities project manager
Tommy Cochrane and presented him with a list of what I wanted to do.”
Cochrane’s $25,000 estimate was beyond Crawford’s budget.
“But at the same time, I said to Tommy, ‘Look at these gardens,’”
Crawford said. “We brought in Mariana Hof [Laguna’s head librarian]
and she basically said, ‘Do what you want.’”
Next Crawford had lunch with City Manager Ken Frank, after which
she took him to the library and showed him the overgrown hedges, the
giant aloe vera, the white fly, the spiders and the damaged
irrigation system.
“Meanwhile, the Eagle Scouts called and said they were doing a
community service project, but they didn’t think there were any in
Laguna Beach -- I said, ‘come on over boys,’” Crawford said.
Frank contacted Lydick. She called Kawaratani, and the cooperative
circle was completed, an example of what can be accomplished by
working together.
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