header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
November 21
1967 - Local voters approve formation of community college and elect COC's first five-member board - Dr. William G. Bonelli Jr., Bruce Fortine, Sheila Dyer, Peter Huntsinger, Edward Muhl [story]
COC board


| Saturday, May 26, 2012

Architect's rendering of the completed Interpretive Center at Vasquez Rocks.
Further Reading: Agua Dulce Man Preserves Tataviam Past (10-2-2000)

 
 

Vasquez Rocks County Park is getting a much-needed facelift. Existing facilities are being modernized, the historic ranger station is being restored, and a new, state-of-the-art Interpretive Center is on the way.

“The County is committed to taking an active leadership role in conserving natural resources and protecting the environment,” said Mohamed Sultan of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works. “Because of the environmental sensitivity of the Vasquez Rocks Natural Area and the educational opportunities provided through the programs offered to the public, this project is intended to serve as demonstration project for sustainable design.”

Established and administered by the U.S. Green Building Council, LEED, or “Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design,” is a voluntary rating system that recognizes building projects which “optimize energy and water use efficiency, enhance the sustainability of the project site, improve indoor environmental quality, and maximize the use and reuse of sustainable and local resources,”  Sultan said.

There are four levels of LEED status: certified, silver, gold and platinum.

The Interpretive Center, L.A. County’s first LEED Platinum building, is scheduled to be completed by September. According to Sultan, it will feature “solar photovoltaic panels on the roof for on-site renewable energy; a high-performance and energy efficient heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system; thermopane glass windows to minimize thermal heat gain and lower energy usage; energy-efficient lighting; low-volatile organic compound paints and floor coatings to improve indoor environmental quality; water-efficient plumbing fixtures; sustainable and recycled construction materials; decomposed granite in the parking lot and paver system in the plaza area to limit disruption of natural hydrology; drought-tolerant landscaping and water-efficient irrigation system; and bicycle racks for alternative transportation.”

 

Multi-year Process

It has been a long and winding road for the Interpretive Center project to get to this stage. First proposed nearly 40 years ago, it took another 20 years to get the county’s backing. Community politics and money hurdles delayed it until about 2002 when the funds from Proposition A finally put the plan into action.

Linda Therrien has worked at Vasquez Rocks as a recurrent recreation services leader for more than 12 years. “As long as I have worked there, I have heard about an Interpretive Center in the works,” she said.

Construction is underway this year on the Interpretive Center.

In 2006, Pasadena-based Sapphos Environmental Inc. prepared the environmental documents and the Agua Dulce Town Council held an open house to gather public input.

“A full-blown environmental impact report had to be prepared for the project,” Sultan said, “due to the sensitive environmental issues and historical and cultural resources associated with the Vasquez Natural Area. The EIR took time to prepare, and had to be reviewed by the public and jurisdictional agencies, and then adopted by the County Board of Supervisors before the project could move forward.”

County Chief Executive William T. Fujioka sent the final Sapphos EIR to the Board of Supervisors for approval in December 2010. Fujioka asked the board to sign off on a $9.7 million total budget, including a $4.9 million for design and construction of the Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park Interpretive Center.

The design-build contract went to PCL Construction Services Inc. in December 2010. Construction on the new Interpretive Center began in May 2011.

Construction is never an exact science, but the current estimate for completion is September of this year. While an actual opening day is yet to be established, Sultan said the county Parks Department will be working with 5th District Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich to schedule a grand opening ceremony for “sometime in October 2012.”

 

Time Capsule Art

Meanwhile, the artists contracted by the Los Angeles County Arts Commission are planning something special for the park, with the community’s participation: there will be a free “rammed earth” artmaking workshop this Saturday, May 26, in Altadena, repeating in mid-June at Vasquez Rocks.

Didier Hess is the collaboration of artists Jenna Didier and Oliver Hess, who became involved with the Arts Commission’s Vasquez Rocks project when they responded to a call for qualified artists.

“We won the commission after giving a presentation of our work and an overview of our approach to creating public art,” Didier said. “The panel really liked our attention to natural processes and expertise in community engagement.

“I founded a nonprofit 10 years ago as an extension of my practice called Materials & Applications. Oliver joined me a few years later, and over the years, we have produced many award-wining projects led by pioneering designers and architects who come to work with us and create projects for courtyards or other sites.”

In the three-day Comprehensive Rammed Earth Workshop Series, “participants will learn what applications are appropriate for rammed earth, how to test soil to see if it is feasible for use in construction, how to amend soil, build forms, and tamp soil into load-bearing walls and benches in the production of a permanent public artwork to be built on-site at Vasquez Rocks Natural Area.”

Didier Hess and the principals’ nonprofit Materials and Applications emphasize large-scale installations that encourage public particpiation and interaction with the environment.

Day 1, this Saturday at Scrubjay Studios in Altadena, will feature artist Andreas Hessing, a native landscape designer who teaches at the Theodore Payne Foundation and was a faculty member for the National Park Service Program, “Your Town.” Workshop participants will learn basic techniques of rammed earth design and construction, and Hessing will demonstrate soil testing, review form construction and participants design their own time capsules – which they can take home.

Days 2 and 3, both at Vasquez Rocks on June 16 and 17 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., will “encourage participants to learn and master a good foundation for rammed earth construction,” Didier said. The workshop will focus on the construction of a rammed earth sculpture that will later serve as a time capsule.

“The way I like to work is to share expertise and enhance participation in the creative act by creating structured – and sometimes non-structured – access to the work while it is in production,” Didier said.

Hess and Didier will offer “a hands-on series, teaching start-to-finish of this ancient sustainable building technology.”

Participants should bring a sack lunch. Experts on Vasquez Rocks’ prehistory, ancient rock art and geology will lecture at lunchtime.

Participants should also bring an object to encapsulate in the sculpture.

“Food Pyramid” by Didier Hess at LACMA in 2010.

“Artifacts can include anything golf ball-sized or smaller,” Didier said, “including coins, toys, plastic doohickeys, locks of hair, false teeth, baby teeth, golf balls and metal charms.”

“Bear in mind that the objects will be getting smashed repeatedly into the rammed earth construction, so if it is important to you that the object is not crushed beyond recognition, then find an object that is durable.”

Workshops are free of charge, but pre-registration is required. For more information or to register, email jenna@emanate.org.

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

No Comments

    Leave a Comment


    LOS ANGELES COUNTY HEADLINES
    Monday, Nov 18, 2024
    Supervisor Kathryn Barger has helped an artwork find its home in the high desert through the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s sculpture loan program.
    Monday, Nov 18, 2024
    The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health is investigating two local cases of E. coli associated with a multistate outbreak linked to multiple brands of recalled organic whole bagged carrots and baby carrots sold by Grimmway Farms.
    Friday, Nov 15, 2024
    Local and federal law enforcement officials conducted a large-scale narcotics trafficking operation on Wednesday, Nov. 13, that resulted in the arrest of several individuals.
    Friday, Nov 15, 2024
    Sunday, Nov. 17 is National Take a Hike Day. The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department has a few tips to share to celebrate the day safely.
    Thursday, Nov 14, 2024
    The California Department of Transportation has been awarded a $5.6 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation as part of the 2023 Advanced Transportation Technology and Innovation program to provide real-time, critical information to drivers by connecting vehicles and roadside equipment with cellular networks.

    Keep Up With Our Facebook
    Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
    1967 - Local voters approve formation of community college and elect COC's first five-member board - Dr. William G. Bonelli Jr., Bruce Fortine, Sheila Dyer, Peter Huntsinger, Edward Muhl [story]
    COC board
    You can make a difference in a child or teen’s life this holiday season through the Boys and Girls Club of the Santa Clarita Valley. You can volunteer at a club holiday event, host a toy drive, sponsor a club family or make a donation.
    Hope for the Holidays with Boys & Girls Club of SCV
    Art, in whatever the medium, can communicate so much. It can inspire imagination, exude peace and calm, or tell the world the stories of a community and a culture or connect on an extremely personal level.
    Kalli Arte Collective to be CSUN’s First Orndorff Artist-in-Residence
    The city of Santa Clarita invites community members to attend the unveiling of the newest inductees to the Walk of Western Stars.
    Nov. 23: New Honorees Inducted into Walk of Western Stars
    Supervisor Kathryn Barger issued the following statement this afternoon, commenting on Attorney General Rob Bonta’s announcement that he filed a joint motion with the County of Los Angeles today to pursue additional monitoring and strengthened protections for youth in Los Angeles County’s juvenile halls:
    Barger Statement on Protections for Youth in Juvenile Halls
    Every day for decades, NASA satellites have been collecting data about oceans and continents around the world.
    CSUN Students ExamNASA Data on Climate Change
    Kick off your holidays with a night to remember with the Santa Clarita Symphony Orchestra.
    Dec. 8: Santa Clarita Symphony Orchestra Presents Holiday Classics
    Music possesses power. It brings people together, stirs emotions and has ability to heal in the form of music therapy. 
    CSUN Music Therapy Program Produces Successful Music Therapists for 40 Years
    SCV Water recently reached several important milestones to bring the Agency one step closer to constructing a permanent water supply for Los Angeles Residential Community and Lily of the Valley Mobile Village.
    SCV Water Works on Permanent Water Supply for LARC Ranch, Lily of the Valley
    Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department Missing Person Unit is advising At-Risk Missing Person, Susan Lynn Emrick, has been located.
    Update: LOCATED LASD Seeks Public Help to Find At-Risk Missing Newhall Woman
    1831 - Local entrepreneurs Sanford and Cyrus Lyon (as in Lyons Avenue) born in Machias, Maine [story]
    Sanford Lyon
    The holiday season is a time for joy, generosity and community spirit. This year, the Child & Family Center invites you to join its heartwarming effort to bring extra cheer to Santa Clarita Valley teens in need.
    Spread Holiday Cheer: Support SCV Teens with Child & Family Center
    The non-profit Rancho Camulos Museum and National Historic Landmark will host a fundraising event, "Early Hollywood and its Camulos Connection" featuring Marc Wanamaker on Sunday, Dec. 8 at 2 p.m.
    Dec. 8: Presentation on Early Hollywood, Rancho Camulos Connection
    William S. Hart Union High School District Social Worker Sarah Gilberts was named California’s 2024 State Social Worker of the Year at an awards ceremony on Nov. 8, part of the 2024 National Association of Social Workers-CA Annual Conference.
    Hart District Sarah Gilberts Named 2024 California Social Worker of the Year
    SCV Water recently marked the completion of its third PFAS treatment facility, which serves its Santa Clara and Honby wells and is located north of Soledad Canyon Road on Furnivall Avenue, with a ribbon cutting on Tuesday, Nov. 19.
    SCV Water Celebrates PFAS Groundwater Treatment Facility with Ribbon Cutting
    Caltrans, the California Highway Patrol, the Office of Traffic Safety and the Department of Motor Vehicles have joined together as part of Crash Responder Safety Week Nov. 18-22 to remind drivers to move over when safe to do so and slow down near traffic incidents and work zones to prevent serious injuries and deaths on California’s roadways.
    Nov. 18-22: Crash Responder Safety Week
    Every holiday season the Michael Hoefflin Foundation for Children’s Cancer assemblies gift baskets for families battling pediatric cancer.
    MHF Seeks Donations for Holiday Gift Baskets
    Family Promise of Santa Clarita Valley opened its new resource center, Williams Hope House in Newhall on Tuesday, Nov. 12 with a formal ribbon cutting ceremony.
    Family Promise of SCV Opens Resource Center
    The California Highway Patrol has announced a major achievement in its ongoing recruitment efforts as it officially swears in 121 new officers, bringing the department past its goal of hiring over 1,000 officers.
    CHP Marks Milestone with 1,000 New Officers
    The installation of the 2025 Valley Industry Association Board of Directors will be held Friday, Dec. 13, 11:45 a.m.-1:30 p.m. at the Dr. Dianne G. Van Hook University Center.
    Dec. 13: VIA 2025 Board Installation
    Single Mothers Outreach's Adopt-A-Family was born in hopes of providing hard-working single parents a way to make a warm and wonderful holiday memory with their children. AAF connects a generous individual, corporate community, or groups with deserving families in need. Many local businesses, churches, community groups, neighbors and individuals generously have “adopted” SMO parents and their children, providing them with gifts, ice-skating, parties and more.
    Single Mothers Outreach Adopt-A-Family Donation Drive
    Educational Results Partnership, a non-profit organization that applies data science to accelerate student success, has released the 2024 Honor Roll list of California’s top performing schools, in partnership with local business leaders and the Santa Clarita Valley Chamber of Commerce.
    SCV Chamber Announces Schools Named to Honor Roll List
    Holiday Home Tour will continue the festivities with its Holiday Home Tour Boutique, sponsored by Williams Homes that will take place on Sunday, Dec. 8, at Williams Ranch model homes in Hasley Canyon.
    Dec. 8: Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital Holiday Home Tour Boutique
    The annual Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital Foundation Holiday Home Tour, organzied by the HMNH Foundation Home Tour League will present the Hearts Aglow Holiday Home Tour Gala on Friday, Dec. 6 at The Hyatt Regency in Valencia.
    Dec. 6: Holiday Home Tour Presents ‘Hearts Aglow Gala’
    SCVNews.com