Harman Patil (Editor)

Los Angeles State Historic Park

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Area
  
13 ha

Established
  
2001

Phone
  
+1 323-441-8819

Los Angeles State Historic Park

Location
  
Los Angeles County, California, USA

Nearest city
  
Los Angeles, California

Governing body
  
California Department of Parks and Recreation

Address
  
1245 N Spring St, Los Angeles, CA 90012, USA

Management
  
California Department of Parks and Recreation

Similar
  
Rio de Los Angeles State Park, Santa Susana Pass Stat, Antelope Valley Indian Mu, Pio Pico State Historic P, Los Encinos State Hist

Profiles

Los angeles state historic park


Los Angeles State Historic Park (LASHP) is a state park unit in development within the Chinatown neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, United States. Also known as the Cornfield, the former brownfield consists of a long open space between Spring Street and the tracks of the Metro Gold Line. Located outside the main commercial and residential area in the northeast portion of Chinatown, the area is adjacent and southeast of Elysian Park neighborhood.

Contents

Promenade at los angeles state historic park


History

This former site of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company's River Station (1876−1901) is considered the "Ellis Island of Los Angeles" where new arrivals from the east first disembarked. Corn leaking from train cars and sprouting along the tracks gave rise to the nickname The Cornfield. The 32-acre (13 ha) site was established as a California state park in 2001.

Park development

In 2001, a five-foot section of the historical Zanja Madre irrigation canal was uncovered. In 2005, the former industrial site was transformed into a productive cornfield for one season as an art project called "Not a Cornfield."

In 2006, a contest was held in conjunction with the California State Parks Foundation to select a design for the park. The preliminary park opened on September 23 of the same year. Hargreaves and Associates of San Francisco ultimately won the contest.

Development of the park has been slow. California's budget deficit forced officials to scale back plans for the park in 2010, earmarking $18 million instead of the planned $55 million. Plans for a bridge/water fountain, theme gardens, an upscale restaurant, and an ecology center with restored wetlands were tabled, while construction of a visitor center, entryway, and walkway overlooking an excavation of the railroad roundhouse is still planned to begin in late 2013. Other planned amenities include a campfire circle, restrooms, and a parking lot with space for food trucks. The tabled features may be added later if funding becomes available.

Numerous community fairs and gatherings have been held in the park. It also contains several plaques that relate the history of the Cornfield, Chinatown, and downtown Los Angeles.

References

Los Angeles State Historic Park Wikipedia