Tongva Park

Tongva Park entrance sign.
Known As
Tongva Park
Architect
James Corner Field Operations
Built
2013
Designated
Location
1615 Ocean Avenue
Santa Monica , CA 90401

Before the buildings, before the streets, before the beach clubs and piers, the Tongva people inhabited the Los Angeles basin for thousands of years. They remain a strong community here today. Tongva Park, a 6.2-acre urban oasis located at 1615 Ocean Avenue, opened in 2013 on the site of the former Rand Corporation campus. Its name acknowledges the Tongva of the past and the present.

Photo of Ocean Avenue Entrance at Tongva Park Photo: Joakim Lloyd Raboff

The park was designed by James Corner Field Operations, the firm responsible for New York City’s High Line. They were commissioned to create a spatial bridge between the Santa Monica Civic Center and the beach while honoring the landscape’s deeper history. The design concept is rooted in the arroyo, the water-carved dry creek bed found throughout arid Southern California. Sculpted topography creates a series of curving, “braided” pathways winding through four distinct areas: Garden Terrace, Gathering Grove, Picnic Grove, and Observation Hill, each offering a different relationship to the sky, the sea, and the ground beneath your feet.

The most striking architectural elements are the paired pavilions on Observation Hill: large, cocoon-like metal structures inspired by traditional Tongva baskets and dwellings. They offer shaded viewing platforms that overlook the coastline, blending organic forms with modern industrial materials.

Sustainability was built into every layer of the project: more than 100 species of drought-tolerant plants, a water recirculation system threading through sculptural fountains and streams, and a design philosophy that treats ecological health as inseparable from public life. Tongva Park received the Urban Land Institute’s Global Award for Excellence, recognition for a park that made something genuinely new out of the act of remembering.

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