Once well-connected to the natural beauty of the Pacific Ocean, Los Angeles’ Wilmington neighborhood had slowly been separated from the coast by the expansion of the Port of Los Angeles—a major maritime industry powerhouse. As the busiest container port in North America, and a major source of economic vitality for the neighborhood and region, the port committed to enhancing public access to the waterfront for the local harbor community, in order to expand its role as both key attraction and economic driver for the area.
实现这一跨学科干预的设计愿景十分有价值。 Sasaki工作室首先与洛杉矶港及其工作人员、社区成员,以及因场所变动会涉及到的机构合作制定了一项总体规划,该规划既构成了威尔明顿与港口运营之间的天然缓冲区,又确定了各行各业平等获取自然资源的途径。威尔明顿社区的西班牙裔居民的生活质量与当地的工业发展互不耽误。在总体规划结束时,Sasaki工作室确定了三个开放空间,分别是威尔明顿滨水公园、Avalon North 街边景观和威尔明顿滨水步道。
The value of an interdisciplinary design intervention in meeting this commitment was unmistakable. Sasaki first collaborated with the Port of Los Angeles and its staff, members of the community and all affected agencies to craft a master plan that both created a natural buffer between Wilmington and the Port’s operations, and identified ways in which equal access to natural resources for Wilmington’s primarily Hispanic residents could co-exist with industry. At the conclusion of the master plan, Sasaki identified three open spaces for implementation: the Wilmington Waterfront Park, the Avalon North Streetscape and the Wilmington Waterfront Promenade.
The port has implemented the waterfront master plan in two primary phases. The first phase opened in 2011: the Wilmington Waterfront Park transformed a brownfield site into a 30-acre park that runs parallel to the coast and provides a buffer between the community and the port’s operations.
The second phase, currently under development, is connecting the park and the community to the ocean. The new L-shaped ribbon of green development will connect the Industrial District and Avalon Corridor with the new Waterfront Promenade. A future land-bridge connection will carry Angelinos and visitors over the industrial port sites to arrive in the space of the promenade—a grand entrance, opening to a sweeping view of LA harbor from the top of a sculpted landform, which cleverly nests the restrooms and services underneath the dome of earth.
To the right, native California sycamore and oak trees create a shaded woodland path towards a play area for children. To the left, a sweeping promenade—with custom-built seating that slides on tracks like the railcars of the former industrial port, is the front porch of the existing Banning’s Landing community center. The visitor can traverse the open plane of lawn ahead, spill out onto the promenade that doubles as a stage, and arrive at a place to sit on the terraced sculpture of rough-hewn stones cut from sparkling onyx that step down to meet the water, offering unobstructed views out over the harbor.
该项目通过设计的方式,使得这片人们以前无法进入的工业基地,转变成了以人为中心的滨水社区。
What had previously been inaccessible—a place for machines, less for people—is transformed through design intervention into a place where a community can meet the water’s edge.