Skip to main content

Aliso Creek Confluence

Support Provided By
Valley3.jpg
plar_logo_horizontal

Play the L.A. River is a come-one-come-all project by the arts collective Project 51 -- a collective of L.A. River-loving artists, designers, planners, writers, educators -- that invites Angelenos to explore, enjoy, reclaim, and reimagine the mighty L.A. River as a grand civic space that can green and connect our communities.

CARD: 3 of Valley

SITE: Kittridge Street + Wilbur Avenue, Los Angeles, 91335

A grand park very soon, and a sweet catch-all site for now, with a big empty lot, a huge electrical tower, and community gardens.

You'll soon be able to play at a 2-acre park here, which will be created at the confluence as part of the Reseda River Loop project, which includes a new pedestrian bridge across Aliso Creek, native plants, shaded benches, interpretive signage, and a refurbished 1-mile trail that would connect the surrounding neighborhoods to the park. A separate multi-million dollar bike path plan will eventually connect the confluence to Sepulveda Basin, the new West Valley Bike Trail, and the planned Caballero Creek Confluence Park.

alisocreekconfluence

How do you play the L.A. River at the Aliso Creek Confluence? Tell us here.

Support Provided By
Read More
Ed Fuentes, artwork Colette Miller (preview)

In Remembrance of Arts Journalist and Advocate Ed Fuentes

Collaborator and friend James Daichendt remembers Ed Fuentes, a longtime advocate of the arts, who passed away this week.
mount_baldy_photo_by_daniel_medina

The San Gabriels: The Remarkable History of L.A.'s Threatened National Monument

An exploration of the rich history and culture of the San Gabriel Mountains and its eponymous river.
Boyle Heights Street Vending. Credits: Feng Yuan

Is Los Angeles Finally Legalizing Street Vending?

Trend-setting entrepreneurs versus “illegal” street vendors is a confusing dichotomy that has become the center of many conversations.