LOS ANGELES (CNS) - A section of MacArthur Park will reopen to the public today after being closed for more than four months as crews conducted a $1.5 million improvement project with landscape and general park upgrades.
The park's lakeside portion, which was closed on Oct. 15, will open at about noon, Councilman Gil Cedillo said Tuesday. In October, Cedillo said the park would be closed about 10 weeks. In January, his office attributed the delay to workforce impacts, supply chain disruptions and heavy rainfall in December.
Cedillo said Tuesday ahead of the park's reopening that the city ``made extensive landscape and general park improvements including but not limited to 133 trimmed trees, planting 60 new trees, 125 new plants, and shrubs, and 276,000 square feet of sod, a new irrigation system with 556 sprinklers and 18,000 feet of linear pipe, new lighting featuring 26 upgraded LED lights, 75,000 square feet of new asphalt walkways and repaved and striped parking lot, and new painted floors, games, park benches, and planters.''
On Tuesday, people must enter the park on Wilshire Boulevard and Park View. The fence around the park is expected to be removed starting Tuesday on Wilshire Boulevard and going counterclockwise until the final fence is removed on Alvarado Street on Friday.
Programming from the Department of Recreation and Parks will continue, as well as that of nonprofit partners including El Centro Del Pueblo, Volunteers of America and Korean Youth + Community Center.
Ahead of the park's closure, Cedillo said that 290 people who were living in MacArthur Park were moved indoors. Another 36 unhoused people who were not living in the park were also moved indoors after they approached outreach workers in the park on Oct. 15 expressing the desire for shelter -- bringing the total to 326, Cedillo's office said.
On Jan. 12, MacArthur Park was included in a number of locations selected for enforcement of the city's anti-camping law to prohibit tents, sleeping and blocking of the public right-of-way. The resolution, which was passed by the City Council and introduced by Cedillo, included both sides of the park: MacArthur Park Lake, at Wilshire Boulevard between Alvarado and Park View streets and the MacArthur Park Recreation Center at 2230 W. Sixth St.
Cedillo said the decision was made with people's health, safety and welfare -- particularly that of children and youth -- as the top priority.
Cedillo's office said that the week before the area was selected for enforcement, there were three tents and three makeshift residences remaining in the park area selected for enforcement, and shelter options were offered to people living in the area beginning in January.
Following the park's reopening Tuesday, outreach teams from the Los Angeles Homeless Service Authority and People Assisting The Homeless will engage with people living in both sides of the park to offer services, according to Cedilllo's office. Peace Ambassadors through Volunteers of America will be onsite to ``maintain peace in the park.''
Unarmed uniformed security officers provided by the parks department will be onsite during the late afternoon to early morning, and park rangers and Los Angeles Police Department officers will be patrolling, according to Cedillo's office.