South beach improvements complete Saturday
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Paul Clinton
City workers are tying up the bow on a package of $5.65 million in
beach improvements that they will deliver to residents on Saturday.
Road crews wearing orange suits and hard-hats finished painting
stripes on the newly-minted beach parking lot this week. On Monday, a
crane placed six one-ton concrete benches into their footings.
The improvements also include new beach restrooms, palm trees, better
signage and several artistic touches, including a new surfboard sculpture
known locally as “Surfhenge.”
The project covered the stretch of Pacific Coast Highway from Beach
Boulevard to Huntington Street.
On May 27, the Planning Commission unanimously approved a second round
of improvements for the city’s south beach area. Similar work, under a
$10-million budget, is scheduled to be completed in the area leading
north from Huntington Street to Huntington Pier.
The second round of work won’t begin until later this year.
Surfhenge, which is formally known as Surf Circle because three
fin-less boards sit in a circle of sand, has been so dubbed because the
stacked boards resemble the stone formations at Stonehenge. The
18-foot-high statue was designed by Kathleen and Howard Meehan, who live
in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Two other art elements have been embedded in the concrete near the
sand. The concrete flatwork, in the shape of a seashell and snail shell,
is a colorful pattern with Walt Whitman poetry celebrating the sea and
its creatures.
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