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Linear Park upgrades expected to begin in summer


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By Kathryn Reed

While the word “park” is in its name, this is not the four-letter word most would use for the stretch of land from Lake Tahoe Vacation Resort to Holiday Inn Express. “Ugly” is what it is.

Linear Park is going to get a complete makeover, with completion likely in 2013. It’s possible a final design plan will be in place in March.

Right now dirt, dead plants and non-working lights line the sides of the bike-pedestrian path that parallels Highway 50 and the gated Tahoe Meadows area.

The dirt and trail along Highway 50 known as Linear Park is about to be upgraded. Photo/LTN

It is the residents of Tahoe Meadows who gave the city the land to create this park. The homeowners owned the land into the first travel lane of Highway 50.

But it was the Washoe who first called this area home – long before white people put gates around it to regulate who could access this lakefront property.

Tahoe Meadows was once a frequent fishing area for the Washoe, who spent their summers at Lake Tahoe. There was a pond nearby that was used to store the fish until the tribe needed them for food.

It is because of this history that it was decided by the now defunct city arts council to erect a statue in that location to honor the Washoe Tribe. The statue on the west end of the park was created by Arnold Aragon. It portrays a typical Washoe woman. Though Aragon, who lives in Schurz, Nev., is Crow and Laguna, he is married to a Washoe woman.

After it was erected in 2000, the original pedestal on which the statue sits began to crumble. In stepped the now-defunct Core 24 Charities, of which this reporter was a member. In 2005, a more durable quartzite pedestal was built. Tahoe Sand and Gravel donated materials.

The arts council had intended to place plaques in a semicircle that would have told the story of the Washoe. Money prevented that from happening.

However, after the revamped pedestal was put in, the city paid for a single plaque to be installed.

Core 24 when it disbanded gave the city more than $20,000 to be used exclusively on upgrades to linear park. After all, the group had worked with the city and South Tahoe Public Utility District to establish a 2-inch water hookup near the old Shell station to supply needed irrigation. The group also planted 1,000 daffodil bulbs around the pedestal that to this day bloom each year.

It won’t be until a March City Council meeting that the $20,000 gets placed in the appropriate fund.

At the Feb. 21 City Council meeting the five approved an agreement with Brett Long Landscape Architecture for planning, design and construction support services.

The staff report says, “The preliminary project scope includes improving the existing landscaping, upgrading irrigation and supply, providing bus shelter pads and enclosures, class 1 bicycle trail repair and installing pedestrian lighting.”

Councilman Tom Davis wants better lighting than what is on Ski Run Boulevard so pedestrians don’t go from dark to light to dark. But it is those types of overhead lights that are proposed.

For one, they meet Tahoe Regional Planning Agency guidelines. They are also more compatible when houses are nearby because of spreading less light.

Nancy Kerry, who was acting city manager for the week while Tony O’Rourke was out of town, said the Tahoe Meadows Homeowners Association is willing to discuss the lighting issue.

The entire cost of the project is estimated between $250,000 and $370,000. The higher cost is if the bike path is revamped.

Long hopes the landscaping could be in place this summer. While native plants will be used, it’s likely grass will go in some areas, along with adaptive accent plants.

When the park was first developed in the 1990s the irrigation system was not adequate and the plants died. People have continuously kicked in the low-level light standards. Now it is just rundown.

Long believes improvements can be ongoing after the initial upgrades are made – like signs and benches.

 

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Comments (14)
  1. Teacher says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    Kae, is it true that this gated homeowners area houses mostly residents from the Bay Area? I’ve heard tell that years ago educators from out-of-town purchased and developed this little Shangrala.

    Fiction or Fact, you detective, you?

    !
    @
    ?$; 0

  2. Gus says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    The linear park looks a whole lot better than what it replaced. I don’t miss the old Chain link and barbed wire fence placed almost to the edge of highway. How soon we forget.

  3. Dogula says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    Years ago “educators” were called “teachers”. Why the change? Trying to justify higher pay and benefits with $3 titles that mean nothing?

  4. Atomic says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    pffffft, Dogula, you think you’re going to hijack this discussion about Tahoe Meadows with your angry slime? Waking up mad is bad for you, turn the TV off and get some exercise.

    The linear park is wildly better now. I do remember how it used to look like. From what I know TM has roots to the Berkeley crowd. I also heard that years ago the city was trying to annex that area for a town hall or something and the residents obtained ‘Historical’ status and blocked that attempt, guess I can’t blame them really. I’ve also heard it is one of the oldest neighborhoods west of the Mississippi? What happened to the plaque on the rock at the entrance?

    Thanks to Tahoe Meadows’ residents for donating the land and improving the city. Look forward to the new improvements-

  5. X LOCAL says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    All that Atomie said was true, but I wonder were the money is coming from ??
    Up to $370,000 dollars and I’m sure it will be more in the end, plus maint.
    I thought we were broke.

  6. David says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    Ugly? To me it’s the most pleasant-looking stretch of real estate between the Y and Stateline.

  7. Sandy says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    David, was that sarcasm? Or were you looking on the other side at where the children’s memorial is or maybe you were looking at Lakeview Commons.

  8. Chief Slowroller says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    I worked on that project when it was built by GB const.

    back then the stipulation was for native plants no grass

    I belive that the lights were broken out by one of thoese angry folks, who own in Tahoe Medows and not by the Mexican children that live across the street.

  9. fromform says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    remember, x local, you are ‘x’, like, not ‘we’ anymore, except we pay your retirement…which is to a large extent why ‘we’ are broke.

  10. Tahoegal2 says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    I think it loos fine too. Maybe just update the lighting. Why does everything have to have grass and manicured landscaping? That just sets us up for long term maintenance expenses. They should consider a low or now water native vegetation design contest. It think it looks OK now, but would look cool with native plants.

  11. fromform says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    i agree with you, gal, about the manicured landscaping with grass ‘lawn’: look at the keys and edgewood and consider the amount of water they use, the amount of fertilizer they dump into the system. the linear park can be further developed with a native-plant theme, without going the high maintenance artificial landscape road.

  12. Steven says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    Lights–We don’t need more light pollution, carry a flashlight.

  13. Passion4Tahoe says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    Just to be clear, the Tahoe Meadows Homeowners did not donate the land. The Redevelopment Agency purchased the land, using eminent domain in a few cases. Prior to the acquisition there was a chain link fence that was erected directly adjacent to the highway, placing pedestrians in very unsafe conditions. The low level, bollard lighting was the only type that the Meadows would approve at the time, and it was repeatedly vandalized.

  14. k9woods says - Posted: February 27, 2012

    I am thrilled that this may finally get done. Core 24 (the capstone project of the inaugural Lake Tahoe Leadership group) made this a priority and worked hard to win that water connection. We all moved on but I know that many of us drive by and look for those first blooms every spring.

    Congratulations everyone (you know who you are).