Pubdate: Mon, 22 Mar 2010 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/index.html Author: Graeme Wood, Vancouver Sun PARK RENEWAL AIMS TO PLEASE KIDS AND FAMILIES, NOT DRUG USERS Grandview Park To Get $1.5 Million Facelift For Beautification And A Design Aimed At Deterring Crime On a typical day in Grandview Park, children and parents play in the rundown playground beneath rows of large leafy trees. But on a concrete plaza a stone's throw away, there is another sort of gathering. Usually it consists of young men openly drinking beer, smoking cigarettes and sharing a joint. The Commercial Drive park is also home to drug dealers who sell crack, heroin and more. The uncomfortable divide is driving the Vancouver park board to redesign the area, which is one of the most highly used inner-city parks. Planners hope the changes will open up the popular area to more activities and help discourage crime, says a landscape designer for the Vancouver park board. "Sight lines will be improved in the new design. There will be a large new open grass area -- something the park hasn't had in a long time," David Yurkovich said of the $1.5-million project, slated to begin in July. The renewal project is the result of lobbying by local residents who feel the park is rundown and prone to crime. Yurkovich said residents identified an area close to the playground as "partly problematic" and requested the new playground be separated more from the rest of the amenities. A local resident who uses the park frequently with his girlfriend and her children explained the problem. "That's a high-dollar drug-trafficking business right there," said Troy Wolfe, pointing to a group of young men. "It's crack, crystal meth and heroin. ... You have little kids with their parents walking past these guys every day," said Wolfe. Daniel Gray, father of a three-year-old daughter, acknowledged there are parts of the park he avoids and said the park could use a facelift. "The kids in the summer want to take their shoes off and run in bare feet, but there's just no way they can do that. I wouldn't take the chance," Gray said as he pushed his daughter on a swing. Some of the young men who frequent the park deny dealing drugs and say they take steps to respect the family space. Donny James, who was hanging out at the plaza, said he and his friends were simply enjoying the sunshine and drinking beer. He acknowledged some parents have complained, but he feels his friends are entitled to use the plaza. "Sensible parents aren't going to let their kids come down here [to the plaza] and hang out with a bunch of adults drinking beer and smoking cigarettes," said James, who also welcomes the improvements. Grandview Park is one square block in the heart of Commercial Drive and is characterized by its large trees and sloping ground. Among the proposed changes are making the park more visible from the street; building a new playground and water park across from the daycare; moving the existing field house to create a large, open grass area; building new washrooms at the corner of Commercial and William Street; and planting new gardens to beautify the park. "I think if we change the physical layout, the kids can use all the elements of the park," said Louise Debruijne, a volunteer at a local daycare. The park will be closed for construction from July to March 2011. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D