Parque Recreativo * San Luis * Recreational Park
San Luis decidió construir un parque. Que se complemente como una oportunidad recreativa adicional.
--- San Luis decided to build a park that will complement the other recreational opportunities.
Parque Comunitario: Una oportunidad de recreación para la comunidad.
Por: Noé Vargas - Presidente Junta Directiva Asoc. Desarrrollo San Luis
Fotos del parque - aún está en proceso
La recreación y los espacios de encuentro social son una necesidad para el sano desarrollo de las comunidades. En Monteverde es usual escuchar que la falta de oportunidades de recreación para las familias, es una limitación que afecta nuestra comunidad. Ciertamente las condiciones de vida actuales, exigen ofrecer más y diversas alternativas recreativas a la población en general.
A través de un parque recreativo se puede ofrecer oportunidades como: recreación familiar, sana diversión, fomento a la salud física y emocional, encuentro comunitario, compartir con respecto y armonía.
San Luis decidió construir un parque. Que se complemente como una oportunidad recreativa adicional, a las otras que ya existen administradas por la comunidad como: La red de senderos del Sendero Pacífico, la Plaza de fútbol, el Centro Educativo Cultural.
Este parque recreativo San Luis se construye en Finca La Bella, de manera que en muchas formas es un proyecto colaborativo. Más recientemente, se tomó la decisión de disponer de un área de 1500 metros de esta finca para construir el parque, ubicado muy estratégicamente al lado del Centro Educativo Cultural y muy céntrico para la comunidad.
Copia del plan hecho por los estudiantes de Futuros Sostenibles.
La planificación del uso del espacio se realizó con el apoyo del programa de Futuros Sostenibles del IMV, y entre otras cosas incluirá: Áreas de estar con mesas y bancas, senderos internos, área de jardín, área con árboles nativos y frutales. Así como, graderías construidas con piedra, muro de llantas para jugar y como retén de suelo. Juegos como tobogán, carrusel, espacio para juegos tradicionales. Para su construcción, se ha tratado de reutilizar la mayor cantidad posible de materiales(ej llantas) y otros materiales de la región (ej piedra).
Pero, y el dinero para hacerlo? Es la pregunta que usualmente viene de primero.......No hay excusa. Si tiene el propósito y personas dispuestas a lograrlo se hace. Así se ha avanzado significativamente con aportes de mano de obra, materiales, maquinaria, diseños, fondos etc.
Perseverancia, trabajo, alianzas son parte de la receta en este exitoso proyecto!!!
Para más información u ofrecer su apoyo al proyecto contacte a:
Tel 2645 7485. Email trcsanluis@gmail.com face: San Luis de Monteverde
Asociación de Desarrollo Integral de San Luis
Fotos de miembros de la comunidad y estudiantes de Futuros Sostenibles trabajando en el proyecto.
Photos of the Sustainable Futures students with community members working on the park.
Community Park: A recreational Opportunity for the Community.
By: Noé Vargas –President of the Board of Directors of the San Luis Development Association
Putting the carousel together.
For a healthy community development it’s important to have spaces for recreation and social gatherings. In Monteverde it’s common to hear about the lack of recreation opportunities for families, and this is a limitation that has affected our community. Clearly current lifestyles demand to have a more diverse offer of recreative alternatives for the general population.
A recreational park offers opportunities such as: family entertainment, healthy amusement, promotion of healthy lifestyles, community encounters, respectful sharing and harmony.
San Luis decided to build a park that complements other recreational opportunities such as: the Pacific Pathway Network, the soccer field, and the Cultural Education Center.
This recreational park is being built in Finca la Bella, so in many ways it’s a collaborative project. Recently, the decision was made to use 1500 m (4900 ft.) of this farm’s area to build the park, located strategically next to the Cultural Education Center, and in a very centric location for the community.
Copy of the plan designed by the Sustainable Futures Group
The space management plan was made with support from the Sustainable Futures Program of the Monteverde Institute, the finished park will include: sharing spaces with tables and chairs, paths, open areas, and native plant gardens and fruit trees. It also includes stone bleachers, a recycled tire wall that can be used for climbing, a slide, a carrousel, and a space for playing Costa Rican traditional games. For its construction we tried to use recycled material as much as possible (ex. tires and metal pipes) and materials from the location (ex. rocks).
But, what about the money to build it? ---This is usually the first question people have, but in reality there is no excuse. If you have the goal and the people supporting it, it’s possible. We have managed to get a lot done with volunteers, donations of materials, designs, funds, etc.
Our perseverance, work and partnerships are part of the recipe to this successful project!
For more information about this project, or if you wish to collaborate please contact:
Tel 2645 7485. Email trcsanluis@gmail.com face: San Luis de Monteverde
Asociación de Desarrollo Integral de San Luis
MASTER PLAN: EFFORTS TOWARD SUSTAINABLE LAND USE MVI
By: Matthew Spehlmann - Monteverde Institute
An internship courtesy of the Grace Elizabeth Groner Foundation in conjunction with Lake Forest College.
Abstract
The efficiency of land use on the Monteverde Institute grounds plays a significant role in the overall degree of sustainability of the Monteverde community at large. For this reason, creating a master plan to guide the use of land is of primary concern to Institute land users.
Introduction
Landscape architecture has taken on many definitions over the course of my internship. At its core, my internship has moved from obtaining information about the natural environment surrounding Monteverde, to gathering impressions of the Monteverde Institute from the nearby community, to plotting the infrastructural layout of the Institute grounds. All said and done, the purpose of my internship has been to get the ball rolling, to put it colloquially, in terms of efficient land use on the Institute grounds. The physical manifestation of this goal takes form as a landscape master plan.
The master plan serves as a guide for future projects that deal with land development on the Institute grounds. Essentially, Monteverde´s unique environment, input from the community regarding desired directions of land use on the Institute grounds, and personal analysis gleaned from the creation of an accurate distribution plan have been blended together into an end product that should be phenomenally helpful in coordinating land use projects on Institute grounds. Communication between different users of the Institute property based on an agreed upon representation of the property is a great step towards coordinated land use and, ultimately, efficient land use.
Study Area and Methods
Early in my internship, research on Monteverde´s unique natural environment was crucial in order to gain an appreciation of the land on which the Institute is situated. For instance, Nadkarni and Wheelwright´s (2000) text, Monteverde, provided ample insight into aspects such as climate, vegetation, soil characteristics as well as other elements pertinent to my eventual work regarding low-impact land use in the region. Furthermore, Wolf Guindon´s narrative, Walking with wolf, written by Chornook (2008) gave a story of man´s quest to live off of the land while leaving as light a footprint as possible. Together the two texts served to familiarize me with the atmosphere the Institute operated in: the Institute acts in some ways as a mediator in the struggle to preserve the extraordinary wildlife of the region while catering to a tourist demand that has negative impacts on the very environment that inspires the demand.
Points of interest at the MVI.
After acquainting myself to the dilemma faced by Monteverde and the surrounding communities, I took up pencil and paper and set out to meet face-to-face with different members of the community. The meetings were unofficial interviews in which I recorded the interviewees´ impressions of the Institute and its land use. Interviewees ranged from staff at the Institute to Quaker practitioners living as far as San Luis. At that point in my internship, I was more of a social architect, as the interviews served to construct a mental image of what the Institute was in the minds of the community.
With an understanding of where the Institute stood in terms of its physical location and with the community´s perception of the Institute in my mind, I began my work on the immediate property of the Institute campus. Armed with a tape measure I sent out among the campus taking note of the triangulated positions of every structure and feature that may be relevant to future projects. The process lasted weeks. Generally, I bounced from the office where I had a developing map draft on a large scale plan to the grounds where I would store measurement notes on a clip board to be transferred back to the office at a later point in time.
Finally, the required measurements were taken and the final step of formalizing the drafts went underway. My supervisor closely guided me along the way as we moved from border design to texturing elements such as gravel roads to adding special interest layers. It is the distribution plan with its special interest layers that provide the bulk of the end products.
Results
The product that has arisen out of my literature study constitutes a small portion of the overall end product. Essentially, I have condensed scientific and social literature down to the most relevant information regarding land use on Institute grounds. This boiling down of information is found in my final presentation PowerPoint. Furthermore, the pertinent information that I felt was necessary in introducing the land use predicament special to Monteverde contains reference pages to sections in texts that elaborate on a finer scale the environmental or social issue to which I refer to in the presentation. The inclusion of reference pages will help future special interest projects cut time on the research stage of their project.
Concerning the interviews, I have compiled many reports of how the Institute is seen by the community. Most of all, the interview reports serve as a checkup on how narrowly the Institute is conforming to its desired goal of being a sustainable voice in the area. The information from the reports has been charted several different ways. The analysis of the reports can be found in the discussion section.
However, the ultimate gift to the Institute resulting from my internship is the distribution plan and its subsequent layers. The distribution plan details the layout of the property, again complete with all elements pertinent to future land use projects. On top of the distribution plan can be placed four special interest layers (more layers can be drafted in order to analyze different aspects of the property that may become of interest when future projects are being considered). However, the four current layers detail access and circulation routes, water ways and flood zones, forest zones, and special features to the Institute that add character to the land while having minimal impact.
These maps will be the first maps that accurately communicate where land use has occurred and potential areas for future land use. Due to this, interns, workers, the community, and any other party interested in the lands on the Institute grounds will share the same understanding of the property on which the Institute is situated. The implications of the final products gain significance upon the review of a trained eye.
Discussion
Upon analysis of the interview reports, I found that the community desires that the Institute serve as a recreation center that emphasizes the nature present in Monteverde. As a recreation center, the Institute would provide the community with a space for activities as well as down-time pursuits such as chatting or reading. Most of the members of the community I spoke with were older and thus recognized that it will be the younger generation who will soon be responsible for staying committed to sustainability. Due to this, members expressed a palpable hope that drawing the community onto the Institute campus will inspire a respect for the land in the youth of the region.
At first glance of the Institute maps, one might simply locate herself according to the other features of the property. Though maps serve to locate and contextualize the user according to her immediate location, the maps and ensuing analysis serve a larger purpose. Efforts towards sustainable land use can be significantly more efficient when users of the land share a common goal for subsequent land use. There have been several projects carried out by single groups of interns only to be neglected when the interns leave the Institute. The land used is then neglected as well and left to future interns to deal with wondering how to convert the land to their specific needs. Instead of having discordant users develop parcels of land for their select interest, an accurate map can serve to coordinate land use over the long run ensuring at the least a consistent use of land.
The Institute is a gem in terms of property value. The difficulty in maintaining the gleam of the gem results from a population of users that sees the land as per select members´ individual, current interests. What belies sustainability is jumbled land use due to failures of carrying out long term visions. I mentioned this master plan was a way of getting the ball rolling in a sustainable direction. Yet, like past projects, the biggest threat to the success of this project is the lack of follow-through by a future intern. The ball may be rolling, but the friction of noncompliance has been a formidable force.
Acknowledgements
Necessary to thank for this opportunity is the Grace Elizabeth Groner Foundation. Without their funding and oversight, this internship opportunity would not have been possible. The Foundation´s association with Lake Forest College enabled my participation in this internship.
Furthermore, the direct supervision of primary coordinators Ashley Gora and Felipe Negrini required hours of time and a bundle of patience in mending my mind from an economic orientation to one of a landscape architect´s. I would like to thank them for their support over the course of my research.
The Monteverde Institute, the community of Santa Elena and nearby towns, and all others who I cannot name person by person deserve my thanks, as they were extremely open and accommodating to the needs of my internship. It was a pleasure to have met those with whom I worked.
References
Chornook, K., & Guindon, W. (2008). Walking with wolf. Canada: Wandering Words Press.
Nadkarni, N., & Wheelwright, N. (2000). Monteverde. New York: Oxford University Press.