Echo Park Lake | |
Location: | Echo Park, Los Angeles, California |
Coords: | 34.0725°N -118.2608°W |
Type: | Lake |
Basin Countries: | United States |
Pushpin Map: | Los Angeles##California#USA |
Pushpin Map Alt: | Location of Echo Park Lake in California, USA. |
The Echo Park Lake is a lake and urban park in the Echo Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. Originally built in the 1860s as a reservoir for drinking water, today Echo Park Lake is a Los Angeles icon that functions primarily as a detention basin in the city's storm drain system, while providing recreational benefits and wildlife habitat. Echo Park Lake also hosts community events, such as the annual Lotus Festival every July.[1] A major renovation was completed in 2013. Beginning in 2019, a homeless encampment developed the shores of the lake that became a "flashpoint in L.A's homelessness crisis."[2]
Echo Park Lake's earliest use by the city was as a reservoir for drinking water. The Los Angeles Canal and Reservoir Company formed Reservoir No. 4 in 1868. The company obtained the water by digging a ditch that sent water flowing from the Los Angeles River — in the area now known as Los Feliz — along a zigzag path that emptied into the reservoir.[3]
In 1891 the four owners of the surrounding area gave up of land to the city around the reservoir so that it could be used as a park. The city began work landscaping the park in October 1892. City parks superintendent Joseph Henry Tomlinson is recognized for coining the name of the new park, which later became the name of the neighborhood. He chose the name because of echoes he heard during the construction of Echo Park Lake in 1892.[4] By 1895, the park and accompanying boathouse were completed.
By the late 1910s, motion picture companies on Allesandro Street, now Glendale Boulevard, had been using the park as a filming location. City leaders responded by barring Keystone Studios, home of the Keystone Cops, from shooting any of its comedies at the lake, on the grounds that too many flowers were being trampled.
In 2006, the state of California identified Echo Park Lake as an impaired body of water, and the city allocated $64.7 million in 2010 to fund its cleanup and revitalization.[5] [6] The lake was closed off and drained in the summer of 2011 when renovation work began. The rehabilitation project tackled Echo Park Lake not only as a recreational body of water, but also as an important part of the Los Angeles ecosystem. Although Echo Park Lake is man-made, it is part of the local watershed. As part of the rehabilitation project, the lake was drained and dredged, a wetlands feature was added, a new boardwalk and walking paths were added, and aquatic plants and lotus flowers were re-planted. The lake reopened on June 5, 2013, after a $45 million renovation.[7] A temporary chain-link fence was placed along the park's perimeter, to protect vegetation and to enable authorities to monitor activity in the park.
Starting in November 2019, a growing population of homeless people began moving into tents throughout the park, eventually covering the northwest corner of the facility and the entire west bank by the lake.[8] As the encampment grew in size, crime at the park surged, disproportionately affecting the homeless.[9] Four homeless individuals died at the park in 2020.[10]
On March 25, 2021, the park was closed for renovations and cleared of nearly 200 homeless tents. The park was cordoned off with chain-link fencing.[11] This was done to address the high increase of the homeless population throughout the park and repair any damages. Closure notices were posted throughout the park days before the sweep, but a crowd of over 200 protesters met LAPD. This situation escalated tension between neighbors on how to handle the homeless problem in Los Angeles properly.
The lake reopened on May 26, 2021, after the tents were removed.[12] Upon its reopening, the park was closed after hours, from 10 pm to 5 am nightly.[13] The city spent $1.1 million to repair and cleanup the park. The cleanup effort yielded of trash, including of biological waste and of drug paraphernalia.[14]
183 people experiencing homelessness at Echo Park Lake were successfully moved into transitional housing.[15] [16] By March 2022, only 17 individuals had transitioned to permanent housing, and 48 remained on a waiting list. The remainder had returned to homelessness, often in worse conditions than before they were evicted.[17]
After the 2022 Los Angeles elections, Hugo Soto-Martinez was elected as the council member for Los Angeles's 13th City Council district, where the lake is located.[18] He had campaigned to remove the fence, calling it a symbol of the city's "biggest policy failure on homelessness."[19]
On February 2, 2023, Soto-Martinez announced plans to remove the fence.[20] The issue immediately proved divisive, with many concerned residents and park visitors expressing safety and cleanliness concerns and fearful of a return to the homeless encampments.[21] Others advocated for the fence to remain, or for a permanent wrought iron fence to be installed around the park's perimeter, similar to other parks in the city, like the Los Angeles State Historic Park. While Soto-Martinez struggled to convince concerned residents and local businesses, he otherwise remained intransigent. The fencing was removed late March of 2023 and since then has been free of homelessness.
Ada Mae Sharpless's sculpture, "Our Queen of the Angels," was donated to the city in 1935 and installed at the edge of Echo Park Lake,[22] [23] and became immediately popular at its installation. Despite its official title, it has become popularly known as "The Lady of the Lake."[24]