Pasadena's Shady Trees May Get Reprieve

Earlier this month the Pasadena City Council voted to approve a plan to "remove 43 mature trees from along Colorado Boulevard-as well as side streets between Lake Avenue and Los Robles Boulevard" and replace them with younger trees that would cause less damage to city sidewalks.

The plan, endorsed by local businesses, may not get the go ahead after all, and now the "item is again up for discussion at next Monday's council meeting, and email between the public and council members (passed on to the Star News) suggests that some council members may be rethinking their votes," reports the Star-News blog Under the Dome.

Feedback on the plan indicates that the ficus trees, which "drop messy seed pods," also happen to provide an important service for locals in Pasadena's often blistering sun: Shade for pedestrians. Under the Dome explains:

The concerns seem to be 1) palm trees are a terrible idea because they don't offer any shade to Colorado 2) the ficus trees are beautiful and people don't want to see them go and 3) gingko trees, slated to replace the ficus, are not big enough and don't grow fast enough to offer a lot of shade
The Council initially balked at the suggestion of exploring an alternative tree to put in for fear it would further delay the replacement process, but it seems now a delay is imminent.

Ficus trees versus urban planning has a legacy in LA County. Remember those frickin' Ficuses in Santa Monica? (They got the ax.)

Email This Entry


Comments (2) [rss]

as a pasadena resident I'm not a big fan of the trees crapping all over the ground like on green street too, but I'd rather keep them over stupid palm trees any day of the week. Manicured Gingko trees wont offer enough shade until 20 years from now.

i would rather chain myself to a tree than see it get replaced by another worthless palm. Why do they care about the seed pods, that's why we wear shoes people. Maybe the business owners should take more responsibility in cleaning the front of their location like they do in other cities.

Post a comment (Comment Policy)

Tips

About LAist

LAist is a website about Los Angeles. More

Editor: Zach Behrens Co-Editor: Lindsay William-Ross Publisher: Gothamist

Contribute

Latest Tip:

New Los Angeles Blog created by journalist and creative writing graduate students at USC http://epo
[more]

Latest Photo:

Subscribe

Use an RSS reader to stay up to date with the latest news and posts from LAist.

All Our RSS

Links