Active Travels | get up & go!  
BLOG SUBSCRIPTION
Subscribe by RSS   RSS   OR   Email
 
     
 
HomeAbout UsGo Play!Contact Us
 
     
 

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Urban Renewal Awards, Los Angeles State Historic Park

For most of the 20th century, this large plot of land in downtown Los Angeles was used as an immense Union Pacific railroad yard. When Union Pacific closed shop in 1989, the property laid dormant until 2001. As California State Parks hemmed and hawed about how best to convert the space into a park, artist Lauren Bon, backed by a grant from the Annenberg Foundation, had her own ideas. With the help of The Trust for Public Land, they excavated some 5,000 tons of soil contaminated with hydrocarbons and metals, planted more than a million corn seeds, and installed an irrigation system to create her artwork, Not a Cornfield. The large crop has now been harvested to make way for bike trails and fields of wildflowers. Los Angeles State Historic Park is still being landscaped, but close to half of the property is open to the public.
 


Posted by Steve Jermanok on 02/03/10 at 08:00 AM
Green Travel • (0) CommentsPermalink Bookmark and Share


Page 1 of 1 pages

 

 
 
 

go play!
Go Play! map

 
best trips of the month

Sea Kayak in Baja: With long stretches of untrammeled beach, sheltered coves, and warm water, the coastline of Mexico’s Baja California is ideally suited for sea kayakers. Add abundant marine life including a great opportunity to go eyeball-to-eyeball with dolphins and gray whales, and you have one of the best paddling experiences in the world. Sea Kayak Adventures have been bringing wide-eyed wanderers to Baja since 1993 on their 8-day jaunts in winter. Fly from LA to Loreto and head to Magdalena Bay on the Pacific coast to spot pods of whales and their newly born calves. Then it’s back to Loreto for five glorious day of paddling (no experience is necessary) and camping in Mexico’s newest national park, Parque Nacional Bahia de Loreto. The $1390 price includes three nights in a hotel in Loreto, all meals, camping, equipment, instruction, and guides.

Hike the Overland Track in Tasmania: Talk to any Aussie and they’ll tell you that Tasmania is the Australia of yore, an island the size of Ireland that boasts a diverse landscape of creamy sands, endless tracts of lush forest, dramatic sea cliffs battered by Antarctic gales, craggy peaks, and alpine lakes. One of the best ways to appreciate this wilderness is on the legendary Overland Track, a 40-mile trek that links 5,069-foot Cradle Mountain with the waters of Lake St. Clair. You can choose to tackle the four to six day hike on your own (though you better book well in advance of the December to April season since the number of backpackers are limited) or on a guided trek with naturalists from Cradle Mountain Huts.

 

about us
photo of Steve Jermanok
ActiveTravels.com gives expert advice to travelers, not tourists, on connecting with nature, people, and wildlife around the world while working up a sweat. The site is for anyone in halfway decent shape who yearns for an authentic and memorable travel experience outdoors, far away from the masses.
READ MORE >

 

tags

 

Listen with Odiogo

Feedburner reader count