|
|
In Richmond Today
How Many More Development Projects?
How Many Casinos?
And How Many Ferries? |
By Wes Starratt, PE, Senior Editor
Richmond has traditionally been a
water-oriented, railroad community with a big oil refinery.
Its first maritime facility, Ellis Landing, was established
in 1860 at the foot of what is now Harbour Way. That is the
same location as the terminal for the Richmond ferry that
operated for a short period after the 1989 Loma Prieta
Earthquake. It is also adjacent to the Port of Richmond’s
operating container terminal and is on the |
|
Luxury homes under construction at Brickyard
Cove with condominiums in the background. Wes Starratt
photo. |
opposite side of Harbour Way from the old
Ford Assembly Building, which is about to be rehabilitated
and transformed into a commercial center. Ellis Landing
operated for more than 40 years until the beginning of the
20th century, with sailing scows carrying farm produce to
the City (San Francisco) and ferrying passengers back and
forth across the Bay, but only when the tide was high enough
to navigate through the mudflats. Ellis Landing was
eventually sold to the city. Toward
the end of that century, in 1895, one of Richmond’s founding
fathers, Augustin Macdonald, in an ill-fated duck-hunting
expedition, first viewed the western shore of what was then
an island, Point Richmond. He was impressed not only with
the beauty of the shoreline but with its deep water, and
learned that the shoreline of Point Richmond was “the only
point on the east side of the Bay where land and navigable
deep water meet.” He used that information to promote Point
Richmond as the western terminus of both the Southern
Pacific and Santa Fe railroads. Santa Fe accepted, and on
one of Richmond’s most memorable days, July 3, 1900, the
ferry “Ocean Wave” discharged the first passengers at Point
Richmond’s Ferry Point to a waiting Chicago-bound train.
Later that same day, the first Santa Fe train pulled in from
Chicago and transferred its passengers to the ferry for San
Francisco. Point Richmond had become the western terminus of
the continental railroad. Over the
years, Ferry Point became a very busy terminal, not only for
ferry-to-rail passengers, but also for railroad cars that
were transferred to barges for the trip to San Francisco. In
recent years, operations declined as passengers shifted from
rail to air and as ports and railroads shifted to
containerized cargo, with the Port of Oakland becoming the
predominant container port of the Bay Area. Eventually,
Santa Fe abandoned operations at Ferry Point, and the
terminal has since become a part of the Regional Park
System. Available Land Attracts
Developers
Today, as the Bay Area’s population continues to surge and
close-in land has become ever scarcer, both residential and
commercial developers have been attracted by the
availability of land in Richmond, both for residential and
commercial developments. So, Richmond has attracted an
increasing number of developers, especially for projects
along the south shore, around Marina Bay where Henry
Kaiser’s World War II shipyards once operated.
Taken together, these developments can be
expected to translate into a growing demand for
transportation facilities, including a San Francisco-bound
ferry service. Such a service was tried immediately after
the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake, which knocked out a key
section of the east span of the Bay Bridge. According to
Architect Tom Butt, a member of the Richmond City Council,
“We always thought that the potential was there for a ferry
service to San Francisco. But it is going to take the right
equipment, the right location, and the right schedule to
make a ferry system work.” The site
that was chosen for the 1989 ferry service and remains
earmarked for future ferry service is the site of Ellis
Landing, which is located on city-owned land at the foot of
Harbour Way, opposite the Ford Assembly Building and
adjacent to the port’s container terminal. Only a short
distance from an area of growing residential and commercial
development, it is the only site along the ship channel with
an essential ingredient, adequate parking. According to Tom
Butt, the 1989 post-earthquake ferry service from there
would have worked except that “they gave us the slowest,
clunkiest ferry they had.” Will Travis, head of the Bay
Conservation & Development Commission, concurs and termed it
“a ratty old ferry!” Since 1989,
more business parks and residential developments have been
built in and around the adjacent Marina Bay area on
Richmond’s south shore. Those developments are undoubtedly a
factor in the city’s recent population growth at a rate of
some 1,000 persons annually, reaching an estimated 101,370
residents in 2003. Another
development about to take place along the south shore is the
rehabilitation of the 517,000-square-foot Ford Assembly
Plant, located at the foot of Harbour Way with ship-docking
facilities directly on the channel leading to Marina Bay.
Built in 1931, the Ford Building was severely damaged during
the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake, but the city was able to
secure sufficient funds from the Federal government to
seismically strengthen the structure. Now, the building has
been turned over to Orton Development, Inc. for renovation
into a center for commercial and retail tenants. The Orton
firm has said that it will build a “working wharf” that may
eventually “include ferry service to bring consumers from
across the Bay.” A member of the city council fancies the
transformation into “a Jack London Square or a Fisherman’s
Wharf.” The city is also preparing a
development plan for the area that would include office,
research and development, and industrial uses, accompanied
by housing along Harbour Way from the Ford Building to the
I-580 Freeway. So, significant projects are underway
throughout Richmond’s south shore.
Rosie the Riveter
An interesting and unusual development that will eventually
attract visitors to the area is the recently established
national park honoring the thousands of women who were a
substantial part of the work force that built the Liberty,
Victory, and Naval ships that helped win World War II. The
park, known as the “Rosie the Riveter World War II
Home-Front National Historical Park,” is located on the site
of one of Henry Kaiser’s Richmond shipyards that employed
90,000 workers and turned out 747 Liberty, Victory, and
Naval ships during World War II. It already includes
monuments and exhibits honoring the “Rosies,” as well as one
of the ships built at the shipyard, the “Red Oak Victory,”
which is now docked near Ferry Point, but will eventually be
docked at or near the Ford Assembly Plant, which is expected
to serve as the Visitor’s Center for the park. |
|
Brickyard Cove with one of the old brick
kilns and condominiums beyond. Wes Starratt photo. |
|
Brickyard Cove
Other than the south shore, Richmond’s other area of
dramatic residential development is Point Richmond’s
Brickyard Cove, which is hidden in a secluded cove not far
from Ferry Point and the Port of Richmond’s Terminal No. 1,
where the Red Oak Victory is now berthed. Brickyard Cove is
where, for many years, bricks were produced in large kilns
for use in buildings throughout the Bay Area. The old plant
hasn’t operated for decades, but some of the old brick kilns
have been retained as a monument. In recent years, Brickyard
Cove has been discovered as a sheltered area with
magnificent views of San Francisco across the Bay, and is
currently in the midst of a housing boom.
Established during the 1960s, the Richmond Yacht Club’s vast
marina at Brickyard Cove probably sparked the cove’s
development, with several hundred nearby custom-built homes
built on landfill or pilings, together with a couple of
office buildings and more recently an Executive Center.
Meantime, on the hillside adjacent to the brickyard’s
quarry, 240 condominiums have been built, with 70 more
currently being added to meet the demand.
Until recently, the development at Point
Richmond was impeded by its remote location, accessible only
through a long, dark tunnel and an industrial drive past the
marine terminal and a tank farm belonging to a former
vegetable oil plant. All of that changed when the national
luxury-home builder Toll Brothers became interested in
Brickyard Cove, and built a direct access road over the hill
from the Canal Area of Richmond. Currently, Toll Brothers is
completing its “Seacliff” project, 149 luxury homes, most of
which have already been sold. The
most recent development is the city’s sale of Terminal No. 1
and the adjacent tank farm to Toll Brothers. The tank farm
will be cleaned up and the terminal warehouse will be torn
down by the city, leaving a 16-acre site with direct water
access upon which Toll Brothers plans another development,
Point Richmond Shores, comprising 289 luxury condominiums.
Other residential developments at Brickyard
Cove appear to be in the pipeline, including one by
Signature Properties. So, adding current residents to future
residents of the various developments would mean that there
should be at least 3,500 upscale residents at Brickyard
Cove, many of whom would have jobs in San Francisco and be
interested in direct ferry service. Even after the warehouse
has been removed, Terminal No. 1 will still retain its wharf
and docking facilities for tying up boats and ferries,
although the site will be without parking. Perhaps a shuttle
bus service could connect to a ferry service that would make
a single stop at Brickyard Cove between San Francisco and a
possible terminal along the main ship channel near the Ford
Building. |
|
The Casino Scene Moves to Point Molate
Indian-owned casinos have become the latest cash cow for the
financially strapped cities of California. Several casinos
have been proposed in and around Richmond, but the
casino/resort proposed for the former Point Molate Naval
Fuel Depot, located within city limits north of the
Richmond-San Rafael Bridge, appears to have the greatest
momentum, at least as far as the City of Richmond is
concerned. However, its isolated waterfront |
|
The proposed Resort and Casino at Point
Molate, Richmond. Photo courtesy of Upstream Investments
LLC. |
location will require not only an improved
access roadway and an enlarged I-580 interchange, but also
ferry service to San Francisco to bring locals and tourists
to the gaming tables. Point Molate
is located on Point San Pablo, which jets out into the Bay
with an abandoned whaling station and a shipping terminal
once used by the Port of Richmond at its point, the remnants
of Chinese shrimp fishing stations along its shores, and the
Chevron-Texaco oil refinery on the other side of its
500-foot ridge. Point Molate came alive after the 1906
Earthquake, when the California Wine Association’s buildings
in San Francisco were destroyed, and the organization sought
a new location for its winemaking operations. The site was
found along the bayshore at Point Molate, which provided
access by both water and rail. The association built an
1800-foot wharf, a company town, and an imposing structure
called Winehaven for aging and bottling wines. Even today,
Winehaven is an imposing structure with a massive
steel-and-concrete building with turrets, parapets, and a
brick exterior. Winemaking continued until Prohibition in
1920 when operations came to an end.
Very little happened at Point Molate until
World War II. Then, the U.S. Navy needed a fuel supply depot
in the Bay Area, so they purchased the Winehaven property
plus an additional 400 acres. Oil storage tanks were built
along the ridge, and a pier was extended into the Bay where
Navy ships could refuel. In the post-war years, after many
of the Bay Area’s Naval installations were closed, the Point
Molate Naval Fuel Depot was no longer needed. It was
declared surplus, a re-use plan was developed, and the
property was transferred to the City of Richmond in 2003. By
November 9, 2004, Richmond’s City Council had two proposals
before it regarding the former Navy property at Point Molate:
A purchase and sale agreement with Chevron/Texaco that would
realize a large immediate infusion of cash ($55 million) and
a smaller continuing stream of revenues; and a Land
Disposition Agreement with Upstream Investments LLC to
develop a resort and casino that would realize a smaller
infusion of cash, but a larger stream of long-term revenue,
an opportunity for economic development, and a significant
number of jobs for the community. The property would
“subsequently be taken into trust by the United States for
the benefit of the tribe.” The City
Council, after examining the two proposals, chose the
agreement with Upstream Investments LLC, which “may
potentially provide revenues in excess of $350 million” from
the proposed resort and casino. The agreement also provides
that Upstream will fully restore key historic structures and
provide for the “renovation of the fueling pier that will
accommodate ferry service linking the Richmond shoreline
with San Francisco.” Upstream will also “widen Western
Avenue to facilitate ease of egress off the freeway” and
“provide for the acceleration of the environmental cleanup
of the site.”
Because of the uncertainties of securing state approval for
the casino, Upstream also provided the city with a backup
development plan. It would replace the casino “with 800
units of multi-family housing, while maintaining the resort,
retail, and hotel elements of the proposal” which would
reduce “the estimated potential income from $350 million to
about $250 million during a 20-year period.”
Upstream Development’s managing partner is
Jim Levine. Other members include John Salmon, former
director of the Governor’s Office of Asset Management, and
the Cohen Group, headed by the former Secretary of Defense,
William Cohen. Upstream is partnered with the Guideville
Band of Pomo Indians and Harrah’s entertainment company of
Las Vegas. Jim Levine is a civil
engineer who was involved with the development of a wetlands
restoration project in Suisun Bay for the disposal of
dredged materials from the Port of Oakland. Jim explained
that, “Ours is really a resort project with the casino as
one element. We’re talking about 85 stores, 15 restaurants
and cafes, a shoreline park, a 1,100-room hotel with
entertainment, a spa and more. The center of this
development is going to be the restoration of the historic
Winehaven, which would be the casino itself. It is a
wonderful use for it, and we would really not affect the
outside of the building. But it’s an expensive project to
restore an old building like that. It is a
steel-and-concrete structure with a brick face on it. We’ve
looked at it, and the restoration can be done quite
magnificently. It will be the focal point of the
development. There will be two major parking garages and
linkages to public transit, including ferries. There will be
no cars in the interior of the site, since it is going to be
a pedestrian village.”
|
A Key Role for Ferries
Jim Levine continued, “We think that the Point Molate Resort
will bring huge numbers of new tourists to the Bay Area.
With a ferry linkage to San Francisco, which we have yet to
establish, tourists and business groups will be able to hop
on a ferry, and in 20 minutes be at Point Molate. We have a
running start at this because the Navy tied 1,100-foot
warships to the Point Molate pier in deep water.
Retrofitting it for ferries is really doable. So, we are
very high on ferry service to San Francisco.”
Because the proposed Point Molate development
is so new, the San Francisco Bay Water Transit Authority (WTA)
has yet to address its specific needs, but the WTA recently
approved an agreement with URS Corp. “for land-use planning
and terminal planning service in conjunction with the
Richmond Ferry Terminal Site Selection Project.” As we have
pointed out, Richmond’s growing number of housing and |
|
The port city of Richmond, shown from upper
left to lower right, the bridge to San Rafael with Point
Molate behind it, Chevron/Texaco’s Long Wharf, Ferry Point,
and Terminal No. 1 with the old Red Oak Victory, then the
breakwater with the marina and Brickyard Cove, and along the
coast the graving docks of Kaiser’s wartime shipyard,
followed by the main ship channel, the container terminal on
the right, the post-Loma Prieta Earthquake ferry terminal at
the point, and the Ford Building on the shore to the right.
Off the picture to the right is Marina Bay. Photo courtesy
of Bob Campbell/Chamois Moon. |
commercial developments on the south shore
and at Brickyard Cove can be expected to grow the demand
for public transit services, including ferries. The Point
Molate Resort, although on the opposite side of the
Richmond-San Rafael Bridge, will add to the overall demand
for ferry service in the area. At the same time, the
agreement with Upstream Development puts the City of
Richmond firmly on the road toward having an Indian Casino
which, the city fathers hope, will pump cash into their
depleted coffers.
|
|
|
Ferry Point, Richmond, for many
yearst the busy western terminus of the Santa Fe
Railroad. Wes Starratt photo. |
|
|
|
Advertisement |
|
|
|