
In a recent piece about the City’s general plan, Emerging Themes of Long Beach 2030, I touched upon the scope of the city’s vision for its future in the next twenty years. While it includes land use, mobility, economic development, historic preservation, urban design, and sustainability, noticeably absent from the plan is an agenda to open space. The reason for this absence is that planning had already updated open space in 2002 as a separate exercise. But there is nothing particularly visionary in that 2002 report: it includes only items such as a call to establish shared-use arrangements with the school district for recess areas, to transform the
The problem is that one would be hard-pressed to discuss any aspect of the new plan, Long Beach 2030, without bringing up the question of open space. In fact, during the public discussions leading up to the plan, community members continually raised open-space issues: increasing access to parks and expanding the amount of park space were two dominant themes. Rather than relying on the tired truisms of the 2002 report, the open-space element of the general plan should be updated to respond to these community needs. Incorporating issues of open space should take place early in the process, so as to avoid piecemeal changes to the open space element that would end up watering down the general plan’s effectiveness.
At issue is not the process of public discussion, but rather getting the public’s input into the plan. The public process has already generated a significant amount of input in regard to questions of nature and parks; that input is likely enough to start creating the framework plan for open space. The scope of work for the consultant team of EDAW-AECOM may need to be expanded, but it would be a worthwhile investment.
All of the prior work done in planning for the city’s park network, including the 2002 update, should be reviewed for applicability. City planning staff and the consultant team should study the bold open space plan for the
It would not be feasible or effective to try and implement the 1930 Los Angeles Olmsted Plan in 2008, but we can learn from the plan’s ambition to connect an entire population to nature and recreation. For instance, the plan envisioned the current location of the
The city is doing what it can to address the inequality of park space coverage, acquiring what land it can with its limited financial resources. Several new parks are being created in central and north
There is no shortage of vision to create a grand open space network for
With these grassroots efforts, in combination with the comprehensive planning exercise that Long Beach 2030 represents, there is no reason why a truly visionary open space network could not be created for the city. The plan is only the first step; we then must forge the shared political will to keep this plan from collecting dust on some back shelf.