Construction of Cape Horn Trail Pedestrian Tunnel Improvements

Construction is underway on two pedestrian tunnels to improve safety for users of the eight mile Cape Horn Trail, which currently crosses heavily traveled State Route 14 twenty-six miles east of Vancouver, WA(Mile post 24.8 and 26.5). The Cape Horn Trail is a popular trail for its spectacular views of the Columbia River Gorge. GreenWorks, working with Wallis Engineering, provided the design for the stone facing of the tunnel facades. The tunnel facades use local quarried basalt stone and have been designed to fit with other historic examples of stone masonry within the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area. To quote the Washington Trails Association, ‘The Cape Horn Trail is about to become one of the prized jewels of the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area.’

This WSDOT project was made possible by funding provided by Western Federal Lands Highway Division. Other construction related to the project will improve safety on SR14 in this area by straightening curves and adding turning lanes. The General contractor for the project is Rotschy, Inc and stone masonry work is being provided by Custom Masonry, Inc.

To learn more about the project, please visit the following websites:

http://www.wta.org/trail-news/signpost/cape-horn-campaign

http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/projects/sr14/capehornsafety

Mt. Scott Creek METRO Grant Application

GreenWorks recently helped the Clackamas County Water Environment Services prepare an application for METRO’s Nature in Neighborhoods Capital Grants Program. The requested funds would finance restoration of fish habitat and provide public education improvements along Mt. Scott Creek at North Clackamas Park in Milwaukie. The lower reach of Mt. Scott Creek is important habitat for several juvenile fish species and its location, within a park heavily used by local youth, makes it a great place for environmental education installations. Proposed improvements include: 48,000 square feet of restored and protected riparian forest habitat.

4 large woody debris installations for fish habitat, including approximately 40 logs total.

320 linear feet of streambank stabilization and restoration (within the total 550 lf section).

530 linear feet of decommissioned trail.

50 linear foot pedestrian bridge for ADA access over wetlands.

2 unique and sustainably designed creek overlooks with educational interpretive signs.

1 culvert removal and bank restoration at Camas Creek confluence for fish passage.

 

 

We are all keeping our fingers crossed that funding comes through for this exciting project!

 

 

 

 

Bond Measure Dollars at Work!

The Project Pioneer Park, located in the Tualatin Hills and Recreation District, embodies some unique natural features including approximately 7.5 acres of wetlands, stream corridors, and upland forest. This park is an amenity for the surrounding neighborhood and we are excited about the opportunity to provide general park upgrades, increase habitat value, and provide an attentive approach to stewardship while creating a memorable and enjoyable recreation space.

GreenWorks Approach

The design challenge at Pioneer Park is how to balance ecological preservation and restoration with recreational uses. The park improvements should respect the natural amenities on site including hundreds of mature native trees and a seasonally wet field. We hope to offer features that keep park users’ feet a little drier and less muddy as they walk through the park. Upgraded play opportunities and ball courts will also be a priority. Our design team will be following the City of Beaverton, Clean Water Services, Division of State Lands and Army Corps of Engineers guidelines for development in sensitive ecosystems.

How You Can Get Involved?

What type of site features would you like to see in this park? How can Pioneer Neighborhood Park be improved? Come share your thoughts and ideas with us at the first community involvement workshop on March 17th. For specific project updates, public meeting details, and general bond information please click on the link to THPRD’s website. From there, you will be able to view Pioneer Park project updates for both the park renovation and the natural area preservation.

http://www.thprd.org/bondprojects/schedule.cfm

We look forward to working with THPRD and the community to make this great park even better!

 

Stormwater Features Completed at Beverly Cleary School

As a Landscape Architect at GreenWorks, I get the chance to work on projects for many local public schools. I am often amazed at how much Portland area students know about rainwater. To some of them the terms rain garden, infiltration, and combined sewer are household words. A few years ago, in a 5th grade class, I lead a discussion on the effects of urban development on stormwater and how increased impervious surfaces speed up and pollute our water . I was barraged with questions about why we continue to let this happen and why someone is not doing more about it. It seems the work of local designers, environmentalists and agencies was not enough for them. It’s refreshing to see this type of concern and curiosity in young people. It inspires me to continue to work with schools. The school community at Beverly Cleary School in NE Portland was inspired to develop a project that improved their schools effects on urban stormwater.  It took some determination.  They built and planted a swale at their school in the spring of 2006, but the downspouts were never disconnected to feed into the swale.

Recently, a dedicated parent with the support of the school community fostered the project through to completion. GreenWorks donated design and consulting services for the swale and most recently for design of the downspout disconnects. In addition to the downspout design, GreenWorks collaborated with students to measure the soil’s infiltration rate, and helped with contractor coordination during construction. The highlight of the project is the pouring downspout bucket. See it in action below. This living science lab is now open for exploration and learning by the school’s students!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nj-tXCxpzsE&fs=1&hl=en_US]

Michelle Mathis is a Landscape Architect at GreenWorks with 8 years of experience.  She received a Bachelor of Science degree in Landscape Architecture from Ohio State University Knowlton School of Architecture, and has a Master’s in Education from Portland State University.

Design Complete on Four Seasons Arboretum

GreenWorks just completed the Master Plan development and design drawings for the City of Gresham’s new Arboretum at Gradin Sports Park including trees and shrubs that will showcase seasonal interest and the local nursery industry.

EDUCATIONAL VALUE

The Arboretum will provide significant educational opportunities for residents of the City of Gresham and region. It will be a place where people can learn about different trees and observe their unique qualities. Over time, the city will be able to monitor and document how particular trees grow and function in specific locations. This learning landscape will provide a valuable tool for future City projects, helping others select the right tree for the right use.

HISTORY

In September 2009 the City of Gresham held an Urban Forestry Community Forum and identified Gradin Community Sports Park as a potential location for a city arboretum. The 33-acre park, adopted in January 2008, was partially developed and landscaping had not yet taken place. City requirements for street trees and buffering provided the framework for the arboretum design. To solicit further input on the design of the Arboretum at Gradin Community Sports Park, a Tree Forum was held on March 13, 2010. The Tree Forum developed clear goals and objectives resulting in conceptual planting schemes, including a list of possible tree collections. With this groundwork in place, the City of Gresham hired GreenWorks to design an arboretum that incorporated goals and objectives from the Tree Forum into a final arboretum design.

DESIGN THEME

The Four Seasons Arboretum creates four internal nodes that feature tree collections with seasonal interest. The collections showcase species for their unique qualities during that particular time of year; for example, the winter tree collection includes various cultivars of Witch Hazel (Hamamelis x intermediaknown for its small star-shaped bloom as well as the Snakebark Maple (Acer davidii) noted for its stripped green bark prominent in the winter. A Children’s Arboretum is situated in the middle of the winter tree collection highlighting playfully drooping and dwarfed trees. As the Sports Park is built out over the years, the Children’s Arboretum may include other features besides trees that would contribute to the designation as a children’s arboretum and natural play area.

The tree species included in the seasonal tree collections are appropriate for residential use and demonstrate to the public a diverse set of tree species available at local nurseries. The entire arboretum illustrates the vast number of tree species cultivated and grown locally. Additional specialized collections supplement major plantings. These include collections of urban lot trees, wetland trees, native wetland trees, conifers, shade trees, street trees, columnar street trees, and natives appropriate for parking lots. The northern and western perimeter plantings feature landscape buffers of conifers and deciduous trees supplemented with shrubs and groundcovers.

SIGNATURE TREES

The arboretum also includes four signature trees accentuating key elements or connections in the Sports Park. The Four Seasons Arboretum incorporates a pair of contrasting signature trees to accent the main entry way into the parking lot. Here Hogan Cedars (Thuja plicata ‘Hogan)’ are arranged in a semi-circle as a backdrop for a row of Flowering Dogwoods (Cornus ‘Eddie’s White Wonder’). Signaling the public entryway this form is repeated with Emerald Avenue Hornbeam (Carpinus betulus ‘Emerald Avenue’) serving as a backdrop to the Flowering Dogwood. This combination is repeated, framing the pathway running north and south between the west and east soccer fields. A double row of Yellow Magnolia (Magnolia ‘Elizabeth’) flanks the pedestrian crossing in the parking lot connecting the spring and fall tree collections. The Yellow Magnolia has both spring interest and fall interest and provides a strong link between the two collections.

The arboretum will be constructed in phases as the sports park is developed. The first phase includes the entry, Palmquist street trees, and northern buffer. The arboretum at Gradin Sports Park will be a beautifully unique place where Gresham citizens can learn about and enjoy the wide range of trees that thrive in the northwest.

North Denver Avenue Ribbon Cutting Ceremony

A public celebration was held November 18th in the downtown Kenton neighborhood of North Portland to mark the completion of streetscape improvements to Kenton’s four block long business district. Community members were joined by Portland Mayor Sam Adams and representatives from the Portland Bureau of Transportation, Portland Development Commission, Kenton Neighborhood Association, Kenton Business Association and Regional Arts & Culture Council and countless others who contributed in one way or another to this project. There was an unveiling of a public art sculpture of carved stone by artist Mauricio Saldana, which now sits prominently on the corner of N. Denver Ave and Kilpatrick St. Phase 2 improvements to the project were completed earlier this fall, which included grinding the existing asphalt pavement and repaving with concrete; a paving process called ultra thin white topping (UTW). Parking and intersections are delineated with dark gray concrete with the travel lanes a natural concrete color. Phase 1 construction work was completed earlier in the year. The complete reconstruction of the pedestrian zone included widened sidewalks, new street trees, stormwater planters that treat road and sidewalk rain runoff, ornamental lighting and carved stone benches. The purpose of this project is to support the continued revitalization of the historic Kenton business district and to make Kenton a safer place.

 

Early Head Start Playground Breaks Ground at Clackamas Community College

After a few months of intensive design, the children at the Clackamas Community College's Early Head Start are starting to see their playground take shape.  Little hands grasping the chain link construction fence and eyes set on the excavator, they wait patiently as the sea of bark chips is replaced with a natural area for creative play.

The Clackamas County Children’s Commission (CCCC) is a non-profit organization that serves children in Clackamas County. Their Early Head Start play space was in need of upgrades. The equipment was out dated and not meeting the physical needs of the young children.

GreenWorks worked with CCCC to develop a plan that fit within their limited space, met development requirements of younger children and offered an alternative play experience from traditional playground equipment. The nature based playground design includes an embankment slide, sand play area, trike loop, potting shed play house, lush planting and timber climbers. GreenWorks helped the client re-invision how to use the existing covered space for additional all season play, how to incorporate appropriate storage, and how play surfacing could extend social areas for music, arts, and classroom activities.

Rockwood/E 188th Avenue MAX Station is Under Construction

Construction of the redesigned 23-year old Rockwood/E 188th Avenue MAX Station on Tri-Met’s original MAX Blue Line serving the Rockwood Neighborhood of Gresham is under construction and rapidly moving towards completion, which is set to open March 2011. The existing eastbound MAX station alignment is moving to the west of E 188th Avenue directly adjacent to the existing westbound platform. This project will specifically improve pedestrian safety and the experience of users while also creating a unique MAX station that will enhance the identity of the Rockwood neighborhood. New station elements include: MAX shelters with transparent windscreens, ticket vending machines and platform furnishings, improved lighting and security cameras, treatment of stormwater from the station in vegetated stormwater facilities, surrounding station landscape planting and most prominently two large public art features located at each of the station entrances. This project is being coordinated with the Gresham Redevelopment Commission’s Rockwood in Motion infrastructure improvement projects in the Rockwood triangle area.

GreenWorks Receives Julian Prize for Sustainability in Public Works

GreenWorks recently received the Julian Prize for Demonstrating Sustainability in Public Works based on their development guidelines work for the Clean Water Services Low Impact Development (LID) Approaches Handbook.

“The award recognizes individuals, practices or projects that showcase the role of public works in furthering the principles of sustainability. The awards are intended to recognize systems thinking, long term design practices, and infrastructure systems that sustain society. The awards are intended to further APWA’s purpose of education and recognition of excellence.” – APWA Oregon Chapter

GreenWorks worked with Clean Water Services to complement and update their current design and construction standards. The Handbook encourages the use of and simplifies the application of low impact development approaches that improve water quality and attenuate stormwater flows for the Tualatin River Watershed. GreenWorks created a series of easy-to-read sketches and fact sheets that clearly show what current LID applications look like and how best to apply them through illustrative diagrams, explanatory text and photographs.

Pendleton Round-Up Celebrates 100th Anniversary

Sept 15-18, 2010 marked the 100th Year Anniversary of the legendary Pendleton Round-Up, an annual rodeo event that brings 50,000 people every year to the city of Pendleton, Oregon. GreenWorks worked with the Round-Up Association, the City of Pendleton, and ODOT to complete three high priority projects in time for the celebration, which include a new landscape gateway into downtown, Round-Up streetscape frontage improvements and Centennial Plaza, and a new Riverfront Park on the Umatilla River.