Middle Lake Restoration Completed, Golden Gate Park

Posted on Jul 21, 2024

In 2022, INTERSTICE was engaged in an ambitious project to restore Middle Lake in Golden Gate Park, transforming it from a dried-up basin into a vibrant habitat teeming with life. Middle Lake, the missing link in the “Chain of Lakes” series of three interconnected lakes in the west end of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, has faced significant ecological decline over the past 150 years since the park was conceived, due to leaks in its clay liner, reduced water depth, algae buildup, and the encroachment of invasive species. Mere improvements were insufficient to save the lake; it required a comprehensive restoration. 

Teamwork Creates A Healthy Community and Habitat

With INTERSTICE in the role of landscape architect on the Construction Team working with San Francisco Recreation and Parks, San Francisco Department of Public Works, Woodard & Curran Civil Engineers, AGS Engineering, Bauman Construction and Catmex Landscaping, over the past nearly two years – Middle Lake has been transformed into a stunning 85,000-square-foot body of sparkling luminous water surrounded by over 10,000 plants including native shrubs, grasses, aquatic plants, wildflowers, native oaks, confers, and dogwood trees. The community input and design effort led by SF Recreation and Parks and developed by Woodard & Curran with the Office of Cheryl Barton engaged numerous stakeholder inputs, including the adjacent residential community, park operations, and multiple city departments related to the environment and its stewardship.  The lake is now a lively ecosystem buzzing with insects, bees, and birds and is already home to a goose family that moved in during late construction, gracing the area with six goslings this spring.  Raptors tour the skies over the new lake, alongside perching songbirds and numerous shorebirds.

Photo by Oscar Roussel 

Even prior to its official reopening, the lake had drawn many eager park users, who sneaked through small openings in the fencing to take a look and enjoy walks on its trail that wraps around its half-mile edge. Construction was delayed to accommodate a hawk family that had nested during the construction start-up. Now there is a thriving raptor community soaring above this new and growing riparian ecosystem.

A System Designed to Create a Healthy Aquatic Ecosystem

The restoration process involved an initial assessment of the lake, followed by the removal of 25,000 cubic yards of silt to create and contour a seven-foot-deep basin with two historic islands, and the installation of a new nearly 2-foot-deep clay liner meant to maintain the water level long term. To ensure a healthy water level and good water quality, the design added a cascading stone streambed (the Cascade) that flows adjacent to an intentionally meandering and accessible path, crossed by footbridges, that provides water to the lake below from the park’s Fly-Casting Pools situated to the east of the Lake.  Aerators at the lake’s bottom recirculate water and oxygenate the lake’s hydronic column.  Overflow from South Lake flows into Middle Lake’s newly designed, stone-lined inlet and circulates out again at the new outlet spillway, into North Lake, connecting the Chain of Lakes with a constant flow of fresh water.  

The Cascade stream, along with the south-to-north cross flow, not only significantly reduces algae growth by keeping the water’s surface in motion, creating a healthier aquatic environment, but it also creates the delightful experience for park visitors of the sound of a burbling creek, flowing over natural stone water weirs and check-dams, swirling between deeper pools on its sinuous journey down the eucalyptus-forested slope – a visually and aurally exhilarating and memorable experience.

Native Plants Increasing the Biodiversity of Both Flora and Fauna

The planting of native upland species such as California sage, beach strawberry, Coyote Brush, wild rose, California poppy, and lupine attract butterflies and hummingbirds, help stabilize the soil, and provide protected habitats for many of the park’s wildlife. Other important plants that are creating and conserving habitat include newly planted coast live oak trees, coast redwoods, Monterey cypress, alders, and woodland flowering dogwoods, whose canopies will expand to further frame views and provide shade and intimacy along the lakeside paths that circumnavigate the new water body.  Numerous native grasses, perennials, ferns, and shrubs fill in the extensive palette of understory flora carefully selected to enhance the biological interdependence of the park’s thriving ecology.  The lake’s restoration is expected to attract about 350 different animal species to its shores, including ducks, frogs, salamanders, turtles, dragonflies, and a multitude of bird species.

Photo by Oscar Roussel 

Aquatic Specific Design

The design of the lake-reinforced shore and small island prioritizes a sequence of shallow “literal zones” where sunlight and oxygen are easily accessible to aqueous plants and small creatures that find shelter from predation in these teaming shallows at seven locations along the lake’s edge where additionally large fallen tree trunks are strategically positioned to enhance this productive protected edge. Here the base of the food chain is born and develops, allowing the lake ecology to flourish. The largest aquatic shelves are situated at the lake’s outlet and inlet where these 4 to16 inch-deep shallows are built up to create the lake’s natural filters and most generative biological zones.

Photo by Oscar Roussel 

Another ecological and environmental benefit of the lake, besides enhancing biodiversity, improving water quality, and increasing habitat, is that it acts as a significant source of carbon sequestration. The lake bed captures and stores carbon from organic matter that settles there. The newly planted vegetation also aids in capturing carbon and helps mitigate the impacts of global warming. Moreover, the lake helps regulate local temperatures, supports groundwater recharge, and contributes to the overall health of Golden Gate Park’s natural environment. 

A Place for Plants, Animals and People

As of July 2024, Middle Lake is now open, offering the community a serene place to relax by the water amidst bright, colorful flowers, with ample opportunities for walking, bird-watching, contemplation, and picnicking. The main entrance to the lake is from Chain of Lakes Drive East, which features a small parking lot and connects to the lake’s curvilinear pathway loop. The lake can also be accessed from the fly-casting pools located above the lake by way of a winding path, lined by flowering dogwoods beside the creek, leading down across two wooden footbridges towards the lake edge path loop.  

Visitors to Middle Lake will also discover numerous places to enjoy vistas of the lake and contemplate this new environment – the Wedding Lawn on the south that overlooks the lake and is found within a grove of Redwoods, both existing and new and surrounded by benches fabricated from a repurposed and harvested redwood from the site; around the perimeter are park benches to enjoy lake vistas, and large sit-able logs made of harvested eucalyptus trees that were removed due to hazardous conditions and recontouring for the routing of newly proposed pathways; more log seats and sculptural logs along the Cascade path as places to pause, hear and see the adjacent cascade waterway, and spots to allow youth to engage with the natural environment through a series of informal goat paths.

Gratitude for our Team and a Mission Fulfilled

Participating in the conservation of this lake has been an honor and a testament to teamwork.  Through restoring Middle Lake’s natural beauty and ecological value, and enhancing its role in our local ecosystem, our team has had the opportunity to contribute to our City community and our region’s health, biodiversity, and resiliency. We are excited to share it with the community and invite everyone to experience its transformation firsthand.  This restoration is a testament to the power of thoughtful design and community collaboration. The rejuvenation of this area in Golden Gate Park will have lasting benefits for both the environment and the community  – hopefully for at least another 150 years to come. We invite everyone to visit and enjoy!

Photo by Oscar Roussel 

 

Saratoga Beach House

Posted on Jul 3, 2024

The Beach house: “All Grown-In”

It is always a rare pleasure to get pictures from our happy clients.  Especially when they turn the camera on the architecture projects that have transformed their lives – and … even more so when they buy a drone and try out their airborne camera on one of our favorite projects, completed over a dozen years ago!  Revisiting the Beach House in this blog as it grows-into the Vancouver Island Coastline is a special delight.  

The home was deliberately designed to blend in with the surrounding coastline.  It was engineered to be light on the land – from its pilots foundations,  hand dug and arranged to avoid the roots of centuries old trees, to its deep rooted invisible sea wall and the inverted dispersal roof drainage.   Its radiant all-electric heating, its green roofs, and power independence – is exemplary of what development should look like on these beautiful riparian edges.  It is ecologically integrated, invisible to the mature vegetation which has grown to engulf and protect it. Its partnership with the land is a testament to our clients’ commitment to our intimate design process of careful integration of landscape and architecture to benefit both the dweller and the site dwelled within.  

The sea wall has replenished and built up the beach, and has become a grassy gentle rocky outcrop, and its planted driveway and native gardens have comfortably completely grown in.  With respect for its habitat the home is taking root, as it floats above the Oyster River flood plain on random peers that thread the roots of the ancient Douglas Firs.  The entire project from architecture to site flood mitigation, and ecological controls, was designed to honor the land and the specificity of “Place”.  In sympathy with the critical natural resources that are part of how these coastline edges regenerate the house helps preserve and support the richly diverse ecosystems that have flourished here for centuries. 

We enjoyed how hard it was to see the house in some shots – like a shy observer camouflaged into the landscape – the home seems to shelter amongst the tees and blend with the logs and tidal debris on the shore,  as it peeks out of the riparian ocean front landscape it is intimately invested within. 

See more about this project here.

Golden Gate Park’s Middle Lake

Posted on Jan 3, 2024

Middle Lake is Rising!

Spring is here and Middle Lake is almost complete and the water level is rising.  Now home to aquatic plants, nesting birds and some 12,000 new plants including over 80 native species of trees and understory plants.  Soon San Franciscans will be able to stroll around the lake’s edge, over two bridges and along a new cascade within a flowering pacific dogwood grove.  

Come visit this summer to enjoy a stroll on the mile long loop trail, a contemplative vista from one of the numerous benches along the lake’s edge, or unroll your picnic blanket on a nearby lawn and listen to the chatter of the birds. 

Golden Gate Park’s Middle Lake – Breaks Ground

Posted on May 8, 2023

INTERSTICE is proud and excited to be part of the team that is undertaking the restoration of a critical piece of green infrastructure in Golden Gate Park; we are re-building Middle Lake.  This freshwater lake is one in a series of three lakes called the Chain of Lakes, which flow north from South Lake, to Middle Lake, and into North Lake at the western end of the park.  The original design & construction of these lakes dates back to 1898 and all required a clay liner to hold water over the ancient sand dunes that underlie the park.

Following a year plus long design process, construction of the project began in the early months of 2023 with the selective removal of certain trees and the protection of many other existing mature trees in preparation to rehabilitate the lake.  

INTERSTICE, as the landscape architect, is working with Civil Engineers AGS and Woodard & Curran, overseeing the new lake design installation to achieve improved accessibility and enjoyment for park visitors, and a diverse plant and aquatic ecology that will provide improved habitat for insects, birds, amphibians, reptiles and mammals that constitute the spectrum of the wildlife that inhabits and moves through Golden Gate Park. Bauman Construction is the General Contractor leading the construction effort working with the SF Recreation & Parks Department and SF Department of Public Works.

This significant undertaking includes replacing the clay liner lake bottom and increasing the water depth, clearing the pipes connecting Middle Lake to South and North Lakes, and rehabilitating the rock cascade that connects to the Fly Casting Pools.

The new design includes a perimeter loop trail that bridges the cascade, significant and diverse native and aquatic plantings surrounding the lake, furnished seating areas with  lookouts along the new pathway which encircles the lake and climbs the slope beside the cascade.  The future plantings include over a dozen native tree species, over50 species of native understory plants, including shrubs, groundcovers, grasses, rushes and aquatic and riparian species located at the lakes edge.

The establishment of the clay liner and lake edge are the first phase and significant part of the work.

Boulder mock-ups for the lake edge perimeter.

New furnishings being crafted from salvaged trees that were planned for removal or came down in this winter’s storms. 

We look forward to sharing more progress as the liner is completed and the lake starts to take shape this Spring.

IA Team Volunteers in the Presidio

Posted on Aug 20, 2018

Presidio volunteering

Recently, INTERSTICE switched up their usual routine by getting outside and getting involved. They headed due north to work with Golden Gate Parks National Conservancy on a habitat restoration project in The Presidio. The project was located at Wherry Corridor, a narrow section of natural habitat threading between man-made structures. For the past 15+ years, the Golden Gate Parks National Conservancy has been nurturing this area back to a healthy landscape filled with native flora and fauna. INTERSTICE assisted with watering and weeding new growth and removing invasive plant species. Not their first volunteering project in the Presidio, INTERSTICE once again enjoyed the opportunity to improve their local habitat.

PARK(ing) Day 2017 – Mirror Mylar Forest-Field

Posted on Sep 19, 2017

PARK(ing) Day 2017 – Mirror Mylar Forest-Field: Pedestrian Safety Along the Polk Corridor

For Park(ing) day 2017, INTERSTICE Architects created an interactive Park(ing) Day installation on Polk Street at Hemlock Alley.  Visitors experienced the wind-activated Mirrored Mylar Forest to explore questions of pedestrian safety and share their experiences of being a San Francisco pedestrian. Which spaces are prioritized for pedestrians?  Where is there room for improvement?

Recording individual experiences as a pedestrian, cyclist or driver, the public was asked to register their information directly onto the installation surface.  An enlarged a map of the Polk Street Corridor [built from data collected from the California Highway Patrol & highlighting pedestrian-related traffic incidents] created the “ground” for discussion.  This interactive pedestrian Park(ing) map evolved throughout the day as a palimpsest that visitors could walk through – orienting themselves within the parking space, the neighborhood, and the city streets.

The installation was inspired by the Polk Streetscape Improvements recently underway and INTERSTICE’s collaboration as part of an initiative to enrich The Lower Polk Alleyways District.  The new Lower Polk Alleyways Vision Plan (LPADVP) recently adopted by the Lower Polk Neighbors, proposes a future vision for the 12 blocks of alleyways located within the boundaries of the Lower Polk Neighborhood.  INTERSTICE Architects guided this community-driven process which has resulted in a unique community-initiated set of strategies and guidelines designed to understand these alleyways, not as singular back-streets or isolated funding opportunities, but instead to consider them as a whole – as a District.

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Calm State

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Cloe-up Street side

Context Sidewalk

Contours

Cubist Erasure

Disolve

Team Photo

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Seated Rain

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IA wins 3 Merit Awards at 2013 ASLA NCC Awards

Posted on Apr 26, 2013

We’re pleased to share that IA received 3 awards in this year’s ASLA Northern California Chapter Design Awards!  We were awarded 3 Merit Awards for our work on the 555 Bartlett Courtyard, Bay Area Remediation Site: 1, and the San Francisco Botanical Garden Pathway Improvements.  You can see our award winning projects on the ASLA NCC website.

INTERSTICE Architects 'Digs In' at the SF Botanical Garden

Posted on Jan 23, 2013

Check out the pictures from our volunteer day at the San Francisco Botanical Garden – IA spent a day helping SFBG Gardener Jason Martinez weed, aerate and plant a grove of Rhododendrons in a section of the Mediterranean Basin known as Heidelberg Hill.  If you’re interested in volunteering your time to assist the SFBG, check out their website – the Garden relies heavily on volunteers like yourself to assist them in a variety of different ways, and no prior gardening experience is required!

INTERSTICE Architects in arcCA

Posted on Jan 18, 2013

INTERSTICE Architects’ project ‘Bay Remediation Site: 1″  has been published in arcCA’s Winter 2012 Design Awards Issue!  BRS:1 won an AIACC Urban Design Merit Award earlier last year, and the issue features our project as well as all the other AIACC award winners.  This is BRS:1’s fourth award in the last 3 years, having previously received awards from the California Architectural Foundation, AIA San Francisco, and an international Green Dot Award for sustainability.  You can check out the project on page 46.

Bay Remediation Site: 1 Published in Landscape Architecture Magazine

Posted on Jul 12, 2012

We’re pleased to share that our project “Bay Remediation Site: 1” has been published in on page 38 of this month’s issue of Landscape Architecture Magazine!  The article features an interview with IA’s Andrew Dunbar and Zoee Astrakhan, and illustrates how the project investigates our office’s critical interest in blurring the lines between landscape, architecture, and infrastructure in order to create smarter systems that both rehabilitate our environment and create positive public spaces.

As discussed in the article, we believe there could be potential for projects such as BRS:1 to transition from the realm of theory to reality by gaining traction with local and state governments  After the introduction of New York’s High Line, the collective interest of cities across the country to invest in green, urban, public spaces has been piqued.  San Francisco is no stranger to this phenomenon – with the renovation of the SF/Oakland Bay Bridge being the city’s primary focus of a plethora of design proposals.  As interesting as many of these ideas are, we believe that the project of “Green-Space-as-Destination-Infrastructure” could move beyond purely reclaiming derelict infrastructure for the purposes of tourism and urban revitalization.

Spanning hundreds of miles of coast line, “The Bay” is easily San Francisco’s most significant geographical characteristic – one that is deteriorating due to factors such as water pollution, environmental loss, and global climate change.  We hope that BRS:1 can function as an in-road to discussing the potential benefit landscape infrastructure can have to creating destination green spaces that not only draw people and prestige to the city, but rebuild our coastal environment and foster community involvement and educational opportunities as well.