ZweigWhite CE News Structural Engineer Rebuilding America's Infrastructure  
 
SEARCH  GO

Latest News
Great Park Board approves comprehensive park design 

IRVINE, CALIF.—The Orange County Great Park Corporation board approved the Comprehensive Park Design for the Great Park presented by Ken Smith, master designer of the Great Park, and the Great Park Design Studio. Design approval moves the 1,347-acre Great Park from the planning and design phase to the production phase.

The 1,347-acre Orange County Great Park is being developed in the city of Irvine on a 4,700-acre decommissioned military base.

The park is being developed in the city of Irvine on the former Marine Corps Air Station El Toro, a 4,700-acre decommissioned military base that was closed in 1999. Lennar Corporation, one of the nation’s largest public homebuilders, purchased the 57-year-old base through public auction in February 2005 for $649.5 million. A development agreement between Lennar and the city of Irvine gave Lennar limited development rights in return for more than 1,300 acres in the center of the base. This land is being developed as the Orange County Great Park.

"The Comprehensive Park Design is an important milestone," said Larry Agran, chair, Orange County Great Park Corporation board. "It reflects nearly three years of hard and productive work on the part of Master Designer Ken Smith and his talented team. Our philosophy has always been plan first, then build. The completion of this comprehensive design enables us to begin production of major elements of the park."

Design elements include the Sports Park, Wildlife Corridor, Agua Chinon, upper and lower canyon, the Lake, the Bosque, agriculture elements, and many other features identified by a variety of stakeholders throughout the planning and design process. The Comprehensive Park Design features sustainable infrastructure, including renewable energy generation, non-polluting park shuttles, connections to mass transit, water reclamation and natural water treatment systems, and recycling of runways to build a variety of park features.

"I have said many times that one does not build a park, one grows a park," Smith said. "This allows us to begin growing elements of the park now and create additional ones in the future with full confidence that it will fit together to create a wonderful experience for park visitors."
More information is available online at www.ocgp.org.

Related Engineering Channels




Headlines From Around The Web

Paved, but Still Alive (New York Times)
Blog: Panama Canal Expansion: A Game Changer (Transportation Issues Daily)
Plans envision Pittsburgh 'Aerotropolis' (Pittsburgh Business Times)
GAI Consultants Makes Acquisition (Inside Indiana Business)




Professional Network








Current Issue


Exclusive

Civil engineering industry outlook - Part 1

While 2011 didn't offer too much progress in an economic turnaround, it seems that many people in the architecture, engineering, planning (A/E/P) and environmental consulting industries are adjusting to challenges. For 2012, increased stability is expected, although large changes don't seem likely.


New & Noteworthy


Progressive Engineering


Editor's Comment


ZweigWhite Upcoming Events

Environmental Connection 2012
Date: February 26, 2012 - February 29, 2012
Location: Las Vegas

Principals Academy
Date: March 8, 2012 - March 9, 2012
Location: Ft. Lauderdale FL

Geosynthetic Reinforced Retaining Wall Failures and Their Remediation
Date: March 13, 2012 - March 13, 2012
Location: Folsom PA

2012 Sustainable Water Management Conference
Date: March 18, 2012 - March 21, 2012
Location: Portland OR

Ninth National Conference on Transportation Asset Management
Date: April 16, 2012 - April 18, 2012
Location: San Diego


Events