Gym
Proposal Takes Plans Underground
LA Times-August 17, 2002
A compromise would put Little Tokyo facility 26 feet below ground
and replace a parking lot with an art park. It also would increase
the cost.
By Erin Chan
Proponents of a Little Tokyo recreation center embroiled
in an exhausting eight-year struggle hope their latest proposal
for a gym gets buried-literally. In a tug of war that has split
a community accustomed to consensus, an unusual proposal to construct
the entire recreation center underground with the 3.5-acre Central
Avenue Art Park project on top could prove the best compromise
for the multiple parties involved.
At a meeting on Monday afternoon with councilwoman
Jan Perry, whose 9th district includes Little Tokyo, the gym's
supporters hope to convince her that down below is the place to
go. In a recent letter to Bill Watanabe, executive director of
the Little Tokyo Service Center, the nonprofit group that is spearheading
the gym proposal, Perry indicated a willingness to pursue a "totally
underground project" as long as the group follows building procedures
in a timely manner and addresses the concerns of all current stakeholders
in the area, known as 1st Street North.
David Nagano, member and former president of the
Little Tokyo Recreation Center Board, called the letter "closer
than anything we've ever had" to securing a site for the recreation
center. With Perry's support, the gym's proponents believe the
City council will grant them permission to build on the site.
If plans move ahead, proponents say, the recreation
center could open in 2005. But before anyone has permission to
begin construction, the city must find another location for a
temporary parking garage on the site, which houses about 1,000
spaces for the Los Angeles Police Department and City Hall.
Perry has so far played referee in the conflict,
convening and moderating a pair of heated public forums in Little
Tokyo that were attended by hundreds of people. During the debates,
representatives from the Veterans of the 100th Battalion/442nd
Regimental Combat Team, East West Players, Japanese American National
Museum and the Museum of Contemporary Art's Geffen Contemporary
endorsed an art park, saying it would add serenity to the site.
The park, scheduled to be built with city and private
funds, would be overseen by a coalition of various groups and
is envisioned as a peaceful gathering space, with greenery and
perhaps sculpture,
Though the World War II veterans worried that the
proposed gym would tower over their Go For Broke monument, which
would have stood just a few steps away, the East West Players
fretted over noise levels that could disrupt performances, as
well as a lack of parking and blocked access.
Gym supporters, unfurling two long banners splattered
with children's handprints, called for a 36-foot recreational
building squeezed between the future site of the Children's Museum
of Los Angeles and the Union Center for the Arts. They had a downsized,
2-acre art park in mind.
A few weeks after the contentious verbal battles,
recreation center architect Hayahiko Takase made an informal pitch
to the Little Tokyo Community Council for an underground recreation
center. The latest drawings from Takase, who also designed Little
Tokyo's New Otani Hotel, show a six-court gym nestled 26 feet
below ground, with auxiliary rooms used for lockers, computer
classes and a senior citizens' lunch program. Also underground
are 168 parking spaces.
In a design much like a suspension bridge, the center's
roof hangs from a series of steel wires and posts protruding above
ground. An alternative design-which would virtually erase any
evidence of the building's supporting structures above the grass-relies
on a 10-foot truss just below ground to anchor the courts.
"By putting it underground it would no longer be
too tall, too big, too close, or too noisy," Watanabe said of
the proposed 45,000-square-foot gym.
But it would be more expensive. At $40 to $45 more
per square foot, the recreation center's price tag could inflate
from about $9 million to more that $11 million, said dean Matsubayashi,
the service center's project manager.
There are also two sets of utility lines running
underground across the site, which Takase said the building could
avoid, and a water table that comes up to 23 feet in some areas.
Takase said the building could be waterproofed by using asphalt
walls and sump pumps.
Current leasers who so ardently opposed the gym's
aboveground plan have approached this new development with cautious
optimism, stressing they must study the plan in detail. "We'll
absolutely be open to discussion," said Michael Maltzan, architect
for the art park. "Everybody will take a significant look."
Though Christine Sato-Yamazaki, executive director
of the Go For Broke Education Foundation, hesitated to immediately
weigh in on the plan, Daniel Mayeda, former co-president of the
East West Players' board of directors, said the new proposal addresses
their previous concerns and deemed it "very favorable."
Battered by a drop in tourism after Sept. 11, many
1st Street business owners welcome any plan that will draw people
to Little Tokyo. "It's been so bad lately," said Sanae Furuki,
who has owned Family Mart, which is located just south of the
site, for 15 years. "We need people; that's it."
Many neighboring restaurant managers agreed-theorizing
that even those consumed with running around underground must
trot up some time to dish out dollars for a hot meal.
Copyright 2002, Los Angeles Times