HomeMy WebLinkAboutPlanning 2013-11-14 Item 5 - Public Hearing: Tukwila Village Phase 1 - Attachment G - Arborist ReportArborist Report: Tukwila Village
Prepared for
Mel Easter, ASLA
The LA Studio
15200 52nd Ave S, Suite 210
Seattle, WA 98188
Site visit : September 13, 2011
Prepared by
Tina Cohen, I.S.A. Certified Arborist #PN0245A
Northwest Arborvitae
Report date: September 16, 2011
Page 1 of 8
Page 2 of 8
Table of Contents
Introduction and Scope of Work page 3
Summary of Tree Health page 3
Explanation of Spreadsheet terms page 4
Spreadsheet separate attachment
Recommendations by Area page 5
Conclusion page 5
Limits to the Report page 5
Photos page 6 -7
Site plan via postal mail
Tina Cohen, Certified Arborist
Northwest Arborvitae
8318 26th Ave NW
Seattle, WA 98117
phone 206 - 789 -3283
fax 206 - 789 -0262
email tina @tinacohen.com
September 16, 2011
Mel Easter, ASLA
The LA Studio
15200 52nd Ave S, Suite 210
Seattle, WA 98188
Arborist Services
Re: Tukwila Village, International Blvd & S. 144th Street, Tukwila, WA
Site visit: 9/13/11
Dear Mr. Easter:
On September 13, 2011 we met on site along with Jessica Marquardt from your office. I received
the site survey, and evaluated the on -site trees. The purpose was to determine which trees are the
healthiest and best candidates for retention.
Scope of Work
I determined the health, structure, life span, overall quality, positive or negative impacts on long —
term survival, and positive or negative impacts to the development. The information is intended to
guide the design as decisions are made about preserving or removing trees. I understand that the
City of Tukwila does not have any tree preservation requirements, only guidelines.
Summary of Tree Health
The majority of the site trees are drought stressed, excessively pruned, and/or unaesthetic. I noted
only 5 superior trees worth special retention consideration out of 59 trees evaluated. This project is
an excellent opportunity to replace declining trees with vigorous, appropriate species.
• North trees, north of the matchline, #1 -18, 45 -47: These are all unaesthetic and in
marginal health. The exception is fir #18, which somehow escaped damage during the
construction of the adjacent apartment building to the east.
• East trees, #19 -24: These are benefiting from the irrigation from the adjacent library's
lawn and are the most vigorous on the site. See the photo on page 5.
Page 3 of 8
• North of S. 144th St.: The trees are dying or very stressed from wounds, excess pruning,
and drought. See the photo on page 6. The exception is Coast redwood #32; even with
graffiti on the trunk it stands out as a superior tree. It can grow to 200 feet and live 300
years. This species is tolerant of disturbance.
• Trees along S. 144th St.: Most were excessively pruned. The Lombardy poplars, although
mostly healthy, are short lived (about 75 -100 years) and are not the best candidates for
retention for this reason. The London planes vary in condition, but they are long -lived
(200+ years) and very tolerant of root and canopy damage.
• South of S. 144th St.: The cedars adjacent to the barbershop have been excessively limbed
up. The trunks are growing into the concrete bulkhead. They will tolerate these conditions,
although the cut stumps of four adjacent cedars indicate the owner does not. Coast
redwood #35 at the far southwest corner of the site is healthy.
• West ROW along International Blvd: The hybrid Norway maples in the sidewalk vaults
are healthy although drought stressed. Eventually they'll fill out to help soften the visual
impact from the busy arterial. Two Red oaks are dying from drought, as noted on the site
plan.
• West on site: The Incense cedars are healthy with only two appearing stressed. They're a
good choice for this location because they rarely damage sidewalks. They are small enough
to transplant assuming they'll get water while being held for replanting.
Details of Findings — Explanation of spreadsheet terms.
Please see the following fields on the enclosed Excel spreadsheet.
Tree #.• Each tree is numbered corresponding to the site plan.
Species: Common names are listed.
Trunk diameter: I measured the trunk diameter inches at 4.5 feet from the ground if the
survey didn't provide it.
Health rating: Healthy = normal vigor and appearance for the species (these wiil be the
best candidates for retention); Healthy fair = viable but not necessarily the
best tree for retention; Poor = not healthy, in decline; Dying = will not
survive another year.
Structure: Characterizes the general shape of the tree. `Codominant' refers to having
two or more trunks or tops that are parallel, versus a single trunk. Many
species do this naturally.
Comment: The comment provides an opinion regarding esthetics and in the case of the
incense cedars, transplant information.
Canopy radius: I measured the extent of the canopy (its radius) from the trunk to the outer
edge. This is a rule of thumb for distance to place protection fencing and
stay away from a tree during construction.
Current status: Viable refers to being alive now and remaining so into the future, assuming
it would be protected during the project. Non - viable means the tree will not
survive long term, whether or not it's protected.
Page 4 of 8
Retention info:
This will help you decide /justify if a particular tree should be saved or not.
If a tree is noted as Superior, it should be saved if possible. Tolerant species
will accept root loss; sensitive species are likely to decline.
Recommendations by Area
East: The best trees on the site are near the east property line, adjacent to the irrigated
King County Library lawn. I recommend saving maple #20 and cedar #21, and protect them as a
group at their dripline radii. Fir #18 is also worth saving if the design will allow it.
West: The incense cedars are small enough and worthy to transplant except for multi -
trunked specimens, or trees that are stressed. The ROW hybrid Norway maples should be retained
and protected during the project. Replace the two ROW Red oaks with maples because of their
condition.
Central/southwest: The two Coast redwoods #32 and #35 are worth saving if they will have
enough space to grow. These are very young trees.
Along 144th Street: The poplars are short-lived and not worth special design changes to
accommodate them. If you decide to retain the most east poplars #23 and #24, they should be
further inspected when the ivy is cleared.
The London planes #36 -39 will tolerate nearly any amount of disturbance and can be retained
except for #38, which leans towards the street. They're young but already provide shade along the
street. Consider if they have enough root space during the design process because they're well
known for buckling sidewalks.
Conclusion
There really aren't very many trees worth saving on this site. They've suffered from excessive
pruning, trunk wounds, and drought. The superior trees clustered near the east property line should
be considered for retention. The small incense cedars near the west property line are tolerating the
dry conditions and should be used elsewhere on the project. If there will be space for the Coast
redwoods, they would create quite a statement in the new landscape.
Limits
Unless expressed otherwise (1) information contained in this report covers only those items that
were examined and reflects the condition of those items at the time of inspection, and (2) the
inspection is limited to visual examination of accessible items without further dissection,
excavation, probing, or coring.
Loss or alteration of any part of a report invalidates the entire report.
Notwithstanding the recommendations and conclusions made in this report, it must be realized that
trees are living organisms and their health and vigor constantly change over time. They are not
immune to changes in site conditions or seasonal variations in the weather.
Page 5 of 8
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PPPUPIST
There is no warranty or guarantee expressed or implied, that problems or deficiencies of the trees
in question may not arise in the future. The report and conclusions expressed herein represent the
opinion of Tina Cohen d/b/a Northwest Arborvitae. Our fee is no way contingent upon any
specified value, a result or occurrence of a subsequent event, or upon any finding to be reported.
Respectfully submitted,
Tina Cohen, ISA Certified Arborist #PN0245A
American Society of Consulting Arborists, Registered Consulting Arborist #473
PNW ISA Certified Tree Risk Assessor #194
tina @tinacohen.com
Enclosures
Excel spreadsheet `Tukwila Village Tree Data'
Site plan via postal mail
Page 6 of 8
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PHOTOS
Trees near the east property line fence, north of S. 144th, are the healthiest because they receive
irrigation from the adjacent library property.
From the left the on site trees are #19 Lawson cypress, #20 Bigleaf maple, and #21 Western red
cedar.
Page 7 of 8
•
The left tree is Doug fir #41. It's dying because of damage from the asphalt poured over the roots.
The right tree is Western red cedar #42 which has been excessively pruned. Many of the on site
trees suffered extreme limbing and are unaesthetic.
The tree in the distance, to the left of the salmon - colored building, is Coast redwood #35. It's in
good health and should be retained assuming there's enough space for its roots and canopy.
Page 8 of 8
Site visit 9/13/11
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remove unhealthy
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SUPERIOR tree
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[Excess limbing
codominant trunks
Excess limbing
Excess limbing
broken top
0
codominant trunks
codominant trunks
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codominant trunks
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codominant trunks
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Health rating
healthy
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healthy
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cedar, w red
cedar, w red
1cedar, w red
cedar, w red
cedar, w red
cedar, w red 1
Doug fir
Doug fir
Doug fir 1
Lawson cypress 1
maple bigleaf
1cedar, w red
Portuguese laurel
Lombardy poplar
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multiple trunks _
0
multiple trunks
codominant to.
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codominant trunks
codominant trunks
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Excess limbing
codominant trunks
topped
codominant trunks
Trunk tore away
X rn
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Structure
7
transplant I
1 transplant
NOT suitable to
transplant
transplant
NOT suitable to
transplant _
looks broken, NOT
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transplant
drought,
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poor canopy
stump sprout
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tolerant s. ecies
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remove unhealthy
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remove unhealthy
(remove unhealthy
!sensitive species 1
sensitive species
1 remove_unhealthy 1
remove unhealthy 1
!tolerant species 1
tolerant species 1
tolerant species
I tolerant species
SUPERIOR tree
sensitive species
sensitive species
remove unhealthy
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Retention info
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Site visit 9/13/11
Retention info
remove unhealthy
tolerant species
tolerant species
tolerant species
Current status
Non- viable
Viable
a)
co
>
N
.0
(o
>
Canopy RADIUS
feet
N
V
N
r)
Comment
stunted, NOT
suitable to
transplant
transplant
NOT suitable to
transplant
thin canopy, NOT
suitable to
transplant
tructure
Y
Y
)dominant tops
Y
0
0
0
Health rating
0
0
0.
healthy
healthy fair
healthy fair
Trunk diam
inches
r)
in
V
Species
incense cedar
incense cedar
incense cedar
incense cedar
is
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See report for further explanation and summary of findings.