{"id":15572,"date":"2010-06-21T16:55:44","date_gmt":"2010-06-21T23:55:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spiken.wpengine.com\/news\/kents-earthworks-park-to-get-much-needed-facelift-thanks-to-grant\/"},"modified":"2016-10-23T11:50:37","modified_gmt":"2016-10-23T18:50:37","slug":"kents-earthworks-park-to-get-much-needed-facelift-thanks-to-grant","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/news\/kents-earthworks-park-to-get-much-needed-facelift-thanks-to-grant\/","title":{"rendered":"Kent’s Earthworks Park to get much-needed facelift, thanks to grant"},"content":{"rendered":"
Cheryl dos Rem\u00e9dios pointed to where the water and rocks should be as she stopped the afternoon of June 17 between the sculpted split-ring berms at Mill Creek Canyon Earthworks Park<\/a> on the eastern edge of downtown Kent.<\/p>\n The original rock-lined channel, designed by acclaimed landscape artist Herbert Bayer<\/a> to run between the split-ring berms, has disappeared. The tall, thick invasive reed canary grass overgrew the channel.<\/p>\n “There should be a water element,” said dos Rem\u00e9dios, city of Kent visual arts coordinator. “And it’s a rock-lined channel.”<\/p>\n But the rocks have sunk since the park opened in 1982. Grass has covered the water and the rocks.<\/p>\n City crews, however, plan to restore the channel and split-ring berms to their original condition over the next two years, thanks to a $70,000 grant the city received June 15 from American Express and the National Trust for Historic Preservation.<\/p>\n “This is an aging park that needs a facelift,” said Brian Levenhagen, parks project manager, as he looked at the overgrown channel partway into the park and east of the main parking lot. “The park is 28 years old and showing signs of wear and tear. We will be able to restore some of the elements to what they originally looked like.”<\/p>\n The park, at 742 E. Titus St., is internationally recognized as a masterpiece of modernist art and functions as a stormwater-detention dam, as well as a public space.<\/p>\n The King County Landmark Commission<\/a> designated the 2 1\/2-acre earthworks portion of the 107-acre park as a historic landmark in 2008. The landmarks commission found the property to be of exceptional significance because of the natural artwork and waived its criteria that a landmark must be at least 40 years old.<\/p>\n