Arroyo

Arroyo Verdugo Greenway

The second phase study of creating a 9 mile linear park is coming WITH YOUR HELP.

In 2021 the City began a high-level study which envisioned the Wash as a nine mile green space from its confluence with the LA River up to Crescenta Valley Park. It includes bike and pedestrian trails with access to business and entertainment venues, and connects several important city centers, services and a multitude of neighborhoods that make up a large core of Glendale.

In 2022 the Council approved the plan, and authorized City staff to establish the groundwork for a second-phase study to continue this work on a more detailed level. This coming Tuesday at 6 PM, this proposal will be presented, and Council will be asked to authorize it.

Your attendance at this meeting is critical.  As you may have seen on social media, there has been push back against improvements to the Wash by a few small, but vocal groups. Transformative changes like this can be hard, so we need to show our elected officials that there is strong support for this project from citizens across the city.  Please get involved in one of the following ways, in order of benefit using our Action Alert explained here.

Priority 1:  Attend the City Council meeting – Tuesday at 6pm. Please join us! This is the most impactful way to communicate your support to your city council members.  Please reply to this email to let us know you are coming! Address: Glendale City Hall, 613 E Broadway, Glendale, CA 91206

Priority 2:  Email City Council in support of the bike plan. If you are unable to attend the meeting, please send an email to your city council members. We suggest sending your email by 12 pm this Monday to ensure it’s read ahead of the meeting.

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The Arroyo Link

From ArroyoLink.com

A SAFE, MULTI-USE PATH FOR WALKING, BIKING, RUNNING, & SCOOTING

The Arroyo Seco is the “jewel in the Crown City’s park system,” yet it’s difficult to access without a car.

The building of the 134, 210, and 710 freeways carved up and partially erased the path — and along with it, mini-parks and historical sites — that Pasadenans once traversed to get to the Arroyo.

The Arroyo Link proposes to uncover and rejuvenate that 1.5-mile path so that we can fully access and enjoy the nature and recreation offered in the Arroyo and beyond, along the regional L.A. River corridor to downtown L.A and Long Beach.

We’re in a time of re-examining our community roots, history, and values as they’ve evolved over the past 140+ years. The Link follows a route of culturally and historically significant sites like Carmelita Gardens, where a nexus of artists and thinkers inspired the young John Muir’s early ideas about nature conservation. As it crosses the 710 Freeway stub, the Link will offer an opportunity to mark the communities displaced by freeways in the name of progress.

The Arroyo Link project is small, but it has it all!

It’s the missing link in our mobility between city and nature, and between our backyard and our region; it looks back our rich history of ideas and ideals while laying a path toward a vision of a healthy, sustainable future.

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