Main content

A Tale of Two Rivers: Los Angeles

Susan Marling visits Los Angeles and Kuala Lumpur to see how regeneration of urban rivers is rewriting those cities.

In Los Angeles Susan Marling speaks to Frank Gehry. The famous architect has been charged with creating a master plan for the improvement of the Los Angeles River. It is a tough job. Since the 1930s when the river was straightened and lined with concrete to mitigate flooding, the waterway has been a hidden, polluted channel that many Angelenos did not even know existed.

But now the money and the political will (we speak to mayor of LA, Eric Garcetti) are in place to ‘green’ the river, create parks, continue the development of cycle paths and to spark a swathe of new housing and connections between neighbourhoods. The big question is whether this can be done without displacing the poorer people and the small businesses who currently live and work close to the river. And if LA becomes host of the 2024 summer Olympics, will it have a new clean river to show the world?

Producer: Victoria Ferran

(Photo: The Los Angeles River)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 2 Jul 201708:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Wed 28 Jun 201702:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Jun 201703:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Jun 201704:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Jun 201706:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Jun 201712:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Jun 201721:06GMT
  • Sun 2 Jul 201708:06GMT

The Documentary Podcast

The Documentary Podcast

Hear more documentaries from the BBC World Service

Podcast