It
may look like a forgotten military landscape, decaying beneath an
elevated freeway and overgrown with weeds, but hidden beneath the
abandoned buildings and broken pavement, Presidio planners see the
potential to regenerate a wetland.
Quartermaster Reach
is currently so neglected, most people don't even know it exists.
Floating between Lucasfilm's Letterman complex and the Presidio Post
Office, some sections have been abandoned for decades. A disused power
plant sits at one end and piles of dirt and construction debris mark the
northern edge. Once home to Yelamu Ohlone, Mexican settlers
commandeered the area's flow of fresh water in the 1700s, the military
established a shooting range on the site in the 1800s and paving for
Doyle Drive had erased the site's history by the 1930s.
But Doyle Drive may hold the key to the 9.5-acre site's restoration.
Nearing the century-mark, the elevated freeway is currently being
replaced with a slightly-lower-impact Presidio Parkway. When
construction is complete, the landscape underneath the freeway may
transform from asphalt to wetland.
The key to revitalizing the area is a stream flowing deep beneath the site. Starting at the El Polin Spring,
where drinking the water was once said to enhance virility, it flows
under Lover's Lane Bridge before disappearing into decades-old storm
drains beneath a bramble. The stream re-emerges briefly in Thompson
Reach, before entering a 72-inch culvert that empties into Crissy Marsh.
The site is well-suited for a wetland, with silt and clay comprising
most of the native soil. The curve of the roadway will maximize natural
light for plants and animals, and with improved tidal exchanges and
continuous green space, the wildlife corridor will be significantly
expanded, though still interrupted by a massive elevated freeway.
Earlier this summer, the Presidio Trust completed a Quartermaster Reach Environmental Assessment
and identified three potential treatments: a minimally-constructed
stream, a diverse wetland with a boardwalk trail or a tidal lagoon.
The
wetland is the preferred alternative for simultaneously enhancing
habitat, providing public access and recognizing historic features.
A long-forgotten rail line that once
connected the Marina to Fort Mason is a crucial element of the site. Those tracks, a section of which still exists to this
day beneath Mason Street, would be commemorated with historic markers.
Transit enthusiasts may dream of a day when Mason is converted into a
rail line, perhaps as an extension of the tracks currently traveled by
the F, but there are currently no concrete plans to do so. Earlier this
year, Supervisor Alioto-Pier criticized a proposal to extend the F-line to Fort Mason, citing bogus concerns about outreach and funding.
In
addition to providing a path for wildlife, the restoration would
facilitate the creation of a new "Tennessee Hollow Corridor," originally
called for in the Presidio's Trails and Bikeways Plan.
The corridor would connect playgrounds and sports fields at the
southern end of the Presidio to Crissy Marsh, providing a continuous
path from Lincoln Avenue to Mason Street.
So far, the project has attracted enthusiastic support. When public
comment closed on August 1, all letters received were in support, and
the Presidio Trust expects to start work quite soon.
"We'll be responding to the comments shortly," said Presidio Spokesman
Clay Harrell, "and we'll release the final report as soon as next week,
along with the signed finding of No Significant Impact." Due to the
involvement of the National Park Service, Caltrans and the State
Historic Preservation Office, complications with inter-agency
cooperation could arise, but all agencies are currently working in sync,
according to Harrell. He estimated the initial construction on culverts
and utilities could begin in as little as a month.
The Presidio Parkway Construction will require a temporary bypass on the
site until 2013, so it'll be a few years before the project is fully
implemented. But once it's finished, Presidio guests and residents --
human, plant, and animal -- will enjoy one more piece in the jigsaw
puzzle that is the restoration of the Presidio.