
| No.
1
News from East |
Let’s VoteCongratulations! The
revived association is a year old! Annual
elections keep our representatives responsive and are suggested by city
neighborhood association rules.
The
vote will be held at Hastings Branch Library on March 11.
Balloting will take place from
You
may nominate willing candidates (including yourself) via e-mail eewna@earthlink.net or phone 626
792-2927
by March 6. Please provide the name,
address, and a contact phone number for the candidate.
Officer
positions are President, Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer. The Secretary position has been vacant. Officers must be members of the association (ie. adult residents of the neighborhood). The President must be willing to provide
contact information to the city’s Neighborhood Connections office,
which will publish
it.
What’s
this “Neighborhood Association”?
East
Eaton Wash Neighborhood Association is comprised of all adults over age
18
residing in
The
neighborhood association mission is to help improve the quality of life
in our
neighborhood. It does this by:
Meetings: Second
Saturday of each month at
E-mail: eewna@earthlink.net
Web site: http://www.eewna.org
Viña
Vieja is the new name for the park being built just west of our
neighborhood
and south of Orange Grove. “Viña Vieja” is the name our
association came up
with and requested. It honors the
vineyard that once covered the northern portion of our neighborhood,
including
the area of the park and the families who first settled the
neighborhood.
The
planned pedestrian entrance to the park from
Making Tiles for Park Sign
Neighborhood
residents are invited to design tiles for the park sign.
The second free workshop for designing tiles
will be held on Saturday February 25 from
Ice
Rinks Project
Planning
continues for an ice rink development on city land located east of
Access
to the project is to be from
The
city hired an architect for the project in September 2005.
In December, at a community meeting at
The
design shows a building 450 feet long by 120 feet wide.
An access road runs along the east side,
connecting the PCC lot to the ice rink parking lot north of the
building. The parking lot has the city’s
required number
of 143 spaces with extra landscaping. The building contains two NHL
sized ice
rinks, one on the north and one on the south end of the building. The lobby, skate rental, offices, etc are
between the rinks with entry on the east side.
The northern rink is expected to be used more often and will
have 400
spectator seats. The locker rooms are to
be underneath those seats. The southern
rink will have 100 spectator seats.
The
conceptual design for the outside of the building shows alternating
sections of
different height and exterior materials along the length.
The idea is to break up the mass of the
building. The lower sections are about
32 feet high, the higher sections about 8 feet more.
The higher sections will have glass facing
north to light the building’s interior with natural light.
The
design shows hedges and trees along the western and eastern sides of
the
project which are to block headlights and diminish noise.
All ice making equipment is to be inside the building and therefore should not be able to be heard outside. A cooling tower on the west side will be designed to blend into the building form. No ammonia or freon will be used for the refrigeration.
Planned
hours of operation are to be part of the operating agreement which is
still
being negotiated. We can expect them to be at a minimum something
like
The
project is to be built using around $12 million of city revenue bonds. In other words, the ice rinks are supposed to
make enough money to pay off the debt for building the project. The land and building will continue to be
owned by the city. The ice rinks are to
be operated under an agreement with the city by the same company which
currently runs the rink at the