- Mayor’s Office
- City Council
- Board of Public Works
- Bureau of Engineering
- River Project Office
- Bureau of Sanitation
- Bureau of Street Services
- Bureau of Engineering
- Los Angeles Department of Water and Power
- Department of City Planning
- Community Redevelopment Agency
- Community Development Department
- Department of Recreation and Parks
- Department of Building and Safety
- Department of Cultural Affairs
- Department of Transportation
- Environmental Affairs Department
- Housing Department
The City’s 2008-09 Adopted Capital Improvement Expenditure Program includes a listing of projects that relate to the Los Angeles River revitalization effort, as reported by the City's Administrative Officer [click here ]. The project listing includes projects for bridges, recreational bike paths, parks and associated facilities, and riparian restoration features.
LARRMP Priority Project List [click here]: This list is used to focus Los Angeles River Revitalization Master Plan implementation efforts on a subset of projects that have the potential to be implemented through partnerships and outside funding. The list is ordered by implementation time horizon, roughly as follows: near term (0-5 years), near-mid (5-10 years), mid (10-15 years) mid-long (15-20 years), and long-term (more than 20 years). However, should adequate funding become available, these estimated implementation time horizons would change. The list will be updated on a regular basis. This effort generally considers the approximately 240 projects proposed by the LARRMP.
Projects proposed by the Revitalization Master Plan [click here] and associated Map locations of proposed projects [click here]
Potential funding for revitalization projects include public/private partnerships, as well as grants and partnerships with federal, state, and county government. Several projects within the Los Angeles River watershed are also being funded by the City's Proposition O bond program for Clean Water, Ocean, River, Beach, Bay, and Storm Water Cleanup [click here], passed in 2004.