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The Irvine Ranch wildlands and parks stretch in a giant green crescent
from Weir Canyon near the 91 freeway at the north end of The Irvine
Ranch… connect with the Cleveland National Forest along the northeast
border of the ranch... continue south where they include the massive
regional open space systems in the northern and southern hillsides of
Irvine, and extend to the Laguna Coast Wilderness Park and Crystal Cove
State Park near Laguna Beach.
The
land is prized for its beauty, as well as its unusual geological and
natural diversity. Special places are found throughout: the 5,500-acre
Limestone Canyon and the "Sinks," a striking formation frequently
compared to a miniature Grand Canyon; the San Joaquin Wildlife
Sanctuary, one of Southern California's largest coastal freshwater
marshes; Irvine's beautiful Bommer and Upper Shady canyons, and
distinctive Quail Hill; and more than 7,000 acres of open space and
coastal sage scrub at Newport Coast.
"The significant open
space, parks and recreational opportunities on The Irvine Ranch provide
aesthetic beauty, relief from development and secure our unique
Southern California outdoor lifestyle," says Donald Bren, chairman of
The Irvine Company. "Residents of communities on The Irvine Ranch have
a better sense of their urban limits and the security of knowing these
large green buffers around them will exist forever."
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Most of the 11,000 acres is the expansive northern sphere of The Irvine
Ranch, immediately adjacent to the Cleveland National Forest and the
Nature Reserve of Orange County.
These
lands form a giant, uninterrupted swath of open space stretching east
from Gypsum Canyon to the Cleveland National Forest, and contain
several complete watersheds and significant wildlife linkages that
enable animals to move freely.
They encompass Silverado,
Modjeska, Blind, Fremont and Baker canyons. Besides their sheer
magnitude, the North Ranch lands are rich in biodiversity. They support
an unusually diverse array of wildlife, plants and geological
formations.
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At the headwaters of Laguna Canyon is a key linkage to The Irvine
Ranch's giant Southern Open Space Land on Irvine's southern boundary.
Laguna Laurel, as the 1,400-acre site is commonly known, also is a key
linkage to Laguna Coast Wilderness Park, Crystal Cove State Park, and
Aliso and Wood Canyons Wilderness Park.
The
land—highly visible along Laguna Canyon Road near the community of
Laguna Woods—has long been described by preservationists as one of the
last remaining undeveloped coastal canyons in Southern California.
Adding the entire site to Laguna Coast Wilderness Park has been the
focus of an 11-year joint preservation effort between the community and
The Irvine Company.
The preservation of this key portion of
the canyon is now assured: The Irvine Company will permanently protect
and then donate as a gift the last remaining undeveloped canyon
parcel—a 173-acre missing link—as open space in perpetuity.
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