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<br />Page 2 of 6 <br /> <br />RECOMMENDATION <br />To review the survey results and comments received during the public outreach process for the <br />Lions Wayside and Delucchi Parks Master Plan Update and provide direction to staff. <br /> <br />BACKGROUND <br />Design During Preparation of Master Plan <br />The 1993 Community Trails Master Plan proposed that a regional trail be located in the <br />Alameda County Transportation Corridor (the abandoned Southern Pacific Railroad Corridor <br />that runs along Sunol Boulevard and First Street), including that a Class A trail (defined as an 8- <br />to12-foot-wide multi-use path in the master plan) be installed through Lions Wayside and <br />Delucchi parks. <br /> <br />In 2002, the Downtown Parks and Trails System Master Plan and Downtown Specific Plan <br />recommended that Lions Wayside and Delucchi parks be considered in conjunction with the <br />Main Street Green (now Rotary Park), Fire Station No. 1 (now the Firehouse Arts Center), the <br />Main Street Bridge, the Regional Trail Corridor, and portions of the Arroyo del Valle to be <br />designed to serve as one contiguous park area. The plans intended that the combined facility of <br />Lions Wayside and Delucchi parks serve the immediate neighborhood, as well as the city as a <br />whole, and that the areas also serve as a regional trail corridor. <br /> <br />In 2006, following the construction of the Firehouse Arts Center and the City’s acquisition of the <br />Alameda County Transportation Corridor property in the downtown area, the Lions Wayside and <br />Delucchi Parks Master Plan (CIP No. 06716) process began. City Council approved a <br />consultant agreement with the firm of Richard Larson & Associates to develop the master plan <br />in December 2008. The firm’s principal, Mr. Richard Larson, was the landscape architect for the <br />Firehouse Arts Center project and was also the principal consultant for the Downtown Parks and <br />Trails System Master Plan. <br /> <br />In 2009, public hearings with the Parks and Recreation Commission and Civic Arts Commission <br />were held to review two schematic designs prepared by Mr. Larson. The major difference <br />between the two schemes was the disposition of the drainage channel (known as Kottinger <br />Creek) that runs through the site and whether it should be piped and “undergrounded” or be <br />enhanced and embraced as a park feature. Both Commissions overwhelmingly supported <br />undergrounding the drainage channel, but shortly afterward the project was placed on hold due <br />to economic uncertainties. Then, in March 2011, the Parks and Recreation Commission <br />prioritized Lions Wayside and Delucchi parks as one of the Commission’s top three priorities for <br />City Council’s priority setting workshop for Fiscal Year 2011/12. <br /> <br />On May 30, 2013, the updated Lions Wayside and Delucchi parks schematic plans were <br />presented to the Parks and Recreation Commission with changes based on the feedback <br />received in 2009. The meeting was held as a public workshop to garner open discussion with <br />the community regarding the schematic plan options. The Commission again voted to <br />recommend undergrounding the drainage channel. The Commission’s support focused on the <br />additional lawn space that would be provided for concerts and events, and the accessibility and <br />safety issues they felt would be addressed with the undergrounding of the drainage channel. <br /> <br />On July 16, 2013, the schematic park designs were presented to City Council. Staff provided <br />Council with a status report on the project, including the input that was received during the