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Glendale: Chess players poised for a strategic move

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  • Glendale: Chess players poised for a strategic move

    Pasadena Star-News, CA
    July 15 2004

    Chess players poised for a strategic move

    By Naush Boghossian , Staff Writer

    GLENDALE -- Chess enthusiasts are getting ready to move from their
    normal haunts in local cafes to the city's new $540,000 chess park,
    which opens Saturday evening.
    More than three years in the making, the free park offers 16 boards
    amid towering chess piece sculpted in a converted passageway along
    Brand Boulevard.

    "We're definitely excited because there are a lot of kids who like to
    play at their leisure and don't have a permanent place to play,' said
    Harout Akopyan, 23, a coach for the All American Association Chess
    Club, which runs chess schools for youngsters in Glendale, Reseda and
    Hollywood. "This park is good for everybody.'

    Glendale is something of a chess hub, since the game is very popular
    among Armenians, who make up more than 70,000 of Glendale's 200,000
    residents.

    In Armenia, people begin playing chess when they're young, and the
    schools there encourage competitions from a very young age. Akopyan's
    club, which serves about 150 children, continuously produces national
    champion chess players.

    Akopyan has 13 national championship titles himself.

    The concept for a park came from local chess clubs, who encouraged
    the City Council to maximize the potential of the little-used
    passageway.

    "We've taken a piece of property that was underutilized and created
    an urban park that is not only aesthetically attractive but serves
    the community,' senior project manager Emil Tatevosian said. "We've
    realized that we have a large chess community in the city, and this
    is a good venue for all of them to come together.'

    The new park is divided into zones, each accented with a chess piece
    King, Queen, Bishop and Rook and has tables with inlaid game boards
    and benches.

    And chess-themed light towers also will allow for nighttime games.

    "There is potential to create a hub of activity there with the Alex
    Theater and Brand Books, which is open until midnight,' Tatevosian
    said.

    The concept of having an area for chess players to gather and play is
    very popular in other countries, said president of the L.A. Chess
    Club Mick Bighamian.

    But in Southern California where the only other chess park is in
    Santa Monica players tend to gather at coffee shops, where the
    unwritten rule is you have to spend money to be able to stay and
    play.

    "I think this is a great movement as far as keeping the youngsters
    and senior citizens to have something leisurely to do at no cost to
    them,' Bighamian said. "And the park helps the promotion of chess to
    get the image it truly deserves as a fun and challenging game.'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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