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International Childrens Park

NEIGHBORHOOD MATCHING FUND PROJECT INFORMATION
700 S Lane St.
Click to skip down to:
PROJECT STATUS

EVENTS:

Lunar New Year
January 31
Year of the Ox Celebration


Seattle's Chinatown/International District is the setting for lion and dragon dances, live cultural performances, children's activities, arts & crafts, food court; location is at the Union Station Great Hall, 401 South Jackson Street, with free admission. It is from 11:AM to 4:00PM. There will be events at Hing Hay and the International Children's Park.

FOR MORE INFORMATION:

Project Manager: Pamela Kliment
800 Maynard Ave. S., 3rd Floor
Seattle, WA 98134-1336
(206) 684-7556
pamela.kliment@seattle.gov

Questions? Email friendsoficp@gmail.com

UW Slide Presentation
UW Slide Presentation


January 2009

In July 2008, the Friends of the International Children's Park received a Neighborhood Matching Fund to hire a designer. Outreach and brainstorming with WILD and the UW School of Landscape Architecture is complete and a powerpoint has been prepared that describes the process.

Much of the WILD work was funded by a grant from the Department of Informational Technology. Using the NMF award, the Friends of (ICP) are in the process of hiring a landscape architect to prepare the schematic design. The RFQ is attached. After the landscape architect is on board, there will be two more public meetings to formulate the schematic design.


LOCATION
700 S Lane St.
BUDGET
$15,000 Neighborhood Matching Fund (to be used for design)
SCHEDULE
Design: January 2009-June 2009
Construction:

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

The current project is to hire a landscape architect to work with the community and Parks to prepare a schematic design and preliminary cost estimate. In 2007, The Friends of International Children's Park received a Small and Simple grant from the Department to undertake initial community outreach and to identify and assess the needs and issues concerning the park. FICP partnered with the Department of Landscape Architecture at the University of Washington and the Wilderness Inner-city Leadership Development (WILD) program.

A collaborative design studio at UW involving the youths of the WILD program produced a set of conceptual design alternatives, based on feedbacks from community workshops. Specifically, two community meetings for brainstorming were held. The first one produced feedbacks from the community on preferences concerning activities and physical elements in the park.

At the community workshop, community members expressed concerns about safety issues related to the park as well as desires for improved visibility and greenery and multigenerational uses so that the park can be enjoyed by both adults and youths, thereby enhancing the safety of the park. A complete report on the results of the studio is available at http://courses.washington.edu/replay/

The International Children's Park was developed in the 1970s in the Chinatown-International District as results of community activism. The park has provided a much-needed open space for recreation and gathering in a dense inner-city neighborhood. It features a Ying-yang inspired layout with sandpit, lawn, rock mound, play equipment, a shelters and benches. Unfortunately, in recent years, the park has suffered from lack of use by local residents despite the expressed desire for more open space in the neighborhood. Poor visibility into the park and lack of flexibility for programming are particular limiting factors for the park. Many of the program elements are also either damaged or out of date and lacking ADA access.

The Chinatown-International District is historic neighborhood with a growing residential population. The district also has many restaurants, stores, social service agencies, and cultural institutions, such as the Wing Luke Asian Museum, that bring a significant number of visitors to the area. The childcare program at the Denise Louise Education Center regularly uses the park for its outdoor activities for preschool children. A renovated park will provide much-needed recreational opportunities for the residents and visitors alike and especially for the growing number of families in the neighborhood.

In November 2008, Seattle voters passed the Proposition 2 - Parks and Green Space Levy. As a listed project in the Levy, the International Children's Park will receive $500,000 for implementing the renovation project.


COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION



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Updated  01/30/2009 12:26

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