Rooted in nature: Irvine honors open space legacy

Families, hikers and cyclists gathered under sunny skies at Quail Hill Trailhead on April 19 to celebrate Irvine’s expansive network of parks and open space – a cornerstone of the city’s master-planned design.

The annual event, hosted by the city and Irvine Company, featured a free pancake breakfast, guided hike and a chance for residents to meet the Irvine Police Department’s Mounted Unit. Families stopped for photos with the horses, while kids munched on pancakes before heading off on the trail.

“When I hike, it makes me feel healthy,” says 7-year-old Cayden Chen, a Laguna Altura resident wearing his Paris Saint-Germain soccer jersey. Cayden, who plays for a local soccer club, says he also likes the challenge of climbing trees and rocks at the trailhead.

For Cayden’s parents, Candace Xu and Anthony Chen, Irvine’s open space was one of the biggest reasons they moved to the city from the East Coast.

“Here, Cayden can get soccer training every day,” Candace says. “On the East Coast, you only get one-third of the year to do that.”

They often hike as a family and say the city’s trail network makes it easy to explore. “It’s very convenient,” Candace says. “Everything is connected – the parks, playgrounds, trails and even the shopping centers. You can walk from place to place.”

Cypress Village resident Yen Nguyen says she fell in love with Irvine the first time she visited – after a trip to Irvine Spectrum Center. “I looked around and thought, ‘How come I didn’t know about this beautiful city?’ ” she says.

“Before, I had to drive to the park. Now I just walk outside. The open space and fresh air keep me healthy.”

Cypress Village resident Yen Nguyen

She moved from Santa Ana to Irvine a decade ago. She walks twice a day, every day – often along the Jeffrey Open Space Trail or through her own neighborhood parks.

“Before, I had to drive to the park,” she says. “Now I just walk outside. The open space and fresh air keep me healthy.”

That kind of everyday access is exactly what the city and its partners had in mind, says Michael O’Connell, president and CEO of the Irvine Ranch Conservancy, which manages the city’s open space.

The city, conservancy and Irvine Company have worked together to preserve more than one-third of the city as open space and parks.

“I hope today you appreciate just how important it is for us, generation after generation, to see to it that that legacy is preserved intact,” Mayor Larry Agran says.

O’Connell also emphasized the global significance of Irvine’s natural environment, noting that it lies within a rare Mediterranean climate zone – one of only five such regions on Earth. Though these zones make up just 2% of the planet’s land area, they support an estimated 20% of all known plant species.

“We are in the botanical equivalent of a rainforest or a coral reef,” O’Connell says.
The celebration concluded with a guided hike led by conservancy staff and the Mounted Unit, with dozens of residents setting off along the scenic Quail Hill Loop Trail.

Rancho San Joaquin resident Grace Kim says she hikes Quail Hill four times a week with friends.

“It’s very safe,” she says. “It adds so much to our quality of life.”