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<br />roundabout and park trails will connect to the existing <br />trails along Bernal Avenue. Bernal Avenue and existing <br />Pleasanton Avenue surrounding the improved intersection <br />will need to be modified to accommodate future traffic <br />flows. <br /> <br />The entry landscape concept addresses park identification, <br />visual screening, and community history. An identification <br />sign wall is planned on the west side of the intersection. <br />This three- to four-foot high, curved wall will indicate the <br />name of the park in the form of letters sandblasted or <br />laser cut into a stone face. A six-foot high, sculpted <br />landform will rise above and behind the sign. Accent <br />plantings would be appropriate in front of the sign. <br /> <br />A similar wall form is planned on the east side of the <br />entry. This wall will form an "S" curve and be subdivided <br />into one hundred panels, one for each year of the first one <br />hundred years that the Park is open to the public. The <br />panels will be inscribed with a brief community history for <br />each year. Annual plantings will be planted at the base of <br />each panel, reflecting different colors for each year. A <br />walkway, concentric with the wall, will lead pedestrians <br />into a garden setting for the history wall. An eight-foot <br />high, sculpted landform will rise above and behind the <br />history wall to asymmetrically balance the entry space <br />while also screening the existing pump station. <br /> <br />Architecture - Community Park buildings are to create <br />subtle focal points reflecting the more dominant character <br />of the planned natural setting in which they are to be <br />situated. Other structures should blend into the <br />naturalized context and become "transparent" in effect. <br />The anticipated functions of buildings and other park <br />structures include restrooms, concessions, maintenance <br />and equipment storage, and picnic pavilions. <br /> <br />SustainabiIitv - Environmental and financial sustainability <br />of the Community Park are very important considerations <br />for the City. The development of the Park and open space <br />amenities are intended to: (1) help restore wildlife <br />habitats, (2) recycle site-generated products, and (3) <br />reduce dependency on renewable resources. Each phase of <br />the Park is to incorporate design, construction, and <br />management practices to conserve energy and regenerate <br />the natural environment. <br /> <br />Design goals and methodologies are to involve the legal, <br />technical, and artistic standards of sustainability, which at <br />the outset are to include "Green Building" construction, <br />water quality protection, resource conservation, and <br /> <br />15 <br />