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Ordinance Exhibit D <br />DOWNTOWN RIVERFRONT <br />LAND USE COMPONENTS <br />CA 19-1, RA 19-1, Z 19-5, WG 19-3, ST 19-3, and SDR 19-2 April 19, 2019 <br />■ Create viewpoints that reach from the adjacent new development site out to river overlooks <br />within the park. <br />■ Integrate history and culture into the landscape via art -based interpretive elements. <br />■ Provide opportunities for activities, play, and programming within the park to encourage <br />visitors from the community and around the world to experience and engage in the landscape <br />of the river. <br />■ Create a safe and inclusive park experience at any time of day or night for park visitors. <br />The proposed development of a Riverfront Park within the subject site seeks to provide the maximum <br />possible amount of landscaped area, open space, and vegetation as a core tenet of its use. As shown on <br />Sheets WR 101.1 and 101.2 (Exhibit B.3), the Riverfront Park site is approximately three acres of linear <br />park land along approximately 1,500 linear feet of the Willamette River. <br />All proposed enhancement work is scheduled to occur above the ordinary high-water line. The <br />proposed landscape design varies from native riparian enhancement approaches, to urban landscape <br />forms using set percentages of native plants and an architectural design approach. The landscapes are <br />restorative and educational in some areas, and more structural as support to hardscape and building <br />design in others. Lawn area will provide open spaces for viewing and play, while stormwater <br />treatment area plantings are designed for water quality treatment within an urban landscape setting. <br />The Riverfront Park includes three types and locations of riparian enhancement in order to provide <br />the maximum possible landscaped area, open space, and vegetation between the development and the <br />river: <br />1) Riparian Enhancement - Grading and Planting <br />The park site is narrow at the north and south ends to accommodate existing buildings on the <br />river, namely the EWEB Headquarters buildings to the north and the decommissioned EWEB <br />Steam Plant to the south. The site widens between these areas, allowing for a grading back of <br />the bank to create a gentler slope; installation of a fabric encapsulated stabilization system; <br />seeding; and replanting with native riparian species. This work will result in a rich and diverse <br />river's edge habitat and will maintain the roughness needed to allow for slower water through <br />this area. <br />2) Riparian Enhancement - Non -Native Species Removal, Pruning, and Planting <br />In the narrower areas of the site, riparian enhancement activities will be limited to removal of <br />non-native invasive species; pruning of trees to remain for tree health and improved views; <br />and planting in the voids of the existing bank armament structures to promote new growth on <br />the river bank. <br />3) Conservation Area Enhancement - Grading, Access, and Replanting <br />At the very north end of the site between the EWEB North headquarters building and the Peter <br />DeFazio Bridge, the project will construct an accessible path and renovate an area above the <br />bike path with new native plantings. The area is currently overgrown with many non-native <br />invasive species and has several concrete paths for viewing the river. This area is located <br />within the Goal 5 Resource Conservation Setback for the Willamette River and as such will be <br />revegetated with native riparian species. An accessible path will bring park visitors to the top <br />of the bridge and provide additional seating and viewpoints along the way. <br />In addition, the Riverfront Park plaza space is intended to support and be supported by a variety of <br />development types surrounding the space. Permitted uses, such as restaurants, a hotel, and other <br />City of Eugene FINAL SUBMITTAL 51 <br />