Shaping the future
Fragmented development threatens bayfront
Editorial
San Diego Union-Tribune
March 2, 2007
Piecemeal development of San Diego's picturesque
waterfront has left a tangle of tourist-related activities
interspersed with office towers, gaping parking lots,
shipping terminals and other maritime enterprises. San
Diego long has lacked a coherent vision for its bayfront,
which many simply take for granted as they speed along
Harbor Drive and glimpse the scene of sailboats bobbing
at anchor.
Now, however, this laissez faire approach threatens
to desecrate the bayfront by walling off view corridors
and restricting public access along the water's edge.
The most prominent menace is the Navy's ruinous proposal
to erect massive, 400-foot-tall buildings within a few
yards of the shore.
The Navy project, on nearly 15 acres of extraordinary
waterfront property south of Broadway, is itself a bitter
lesson in what can happen when there is no overarching
vision to guide development. Fifteen years ago the City
Council acted in a vacuum when it granted the Navy legal
entitlements to this oversized project. Now, virtually
every civic leader in San Diego is shaking his head
in disappointment at the prospect that this prime parcel
will be transformed into a steel and concrete behemoth,
darkening a huge swath of the embarcadero.
Just in time, two veteran San Diego elected officials,
Supervisor Ron Roberts and former state Sen. Steve Peace,
have launched a bipartisan effort to save the bayfront.
Their idea is to enlist all of the governmental entities
in San Diego – the City Council, the Board of Supervisors,
the Navy, the Port Commission, the Airport Authority
– to devise a comprehensive master plan for the entire
waterfront, from Lindbergh Field to National City.
This is not a new idea. Nor is it a simple idea. In
fact, it is a daring challenge to San Diego to strive
toward a bigger dream, to realize at last the enormous
potential of our unique setting on the bay. It also
is a historic opportunity that must not be lost.
Apart from overhauling the Navy's proposal by working
out a deal to relocate its headquarters building to
another location, Roberts and Peace have a long list
of other promising ideas to enhance the waterfront.
A broader public process, involving not only government
agencies but also ordinary citizens, would doubtless
generate many more good ideas.
The overall aim is to push development back a bit to
make room for a wide public promenade along the bay.
Harbor Drive, now a traffic-clogged artery, would give
way to pedestrians and related activities, allowing
people open access to the water.
Another looming threat to this grand vision is the San
Diego County Regional Airport Authority's imminent plans
to build 10 additional gates at Lindbergh Field. This
would essentially preclude the idea of moving the airport's
terminal operations to the Interstate 5 side of the
airport, freeing up valuable acreage on the Harbor Island
side of the airport for public access to the bay.
At the very least, airport commissioners should delay
the gate expansion and join in the comprehensive planning
process envisioned by Roberts and Peace. So should San
Diego's other governmental players. This rare chance
to reshape the future must not be missed.
BACK
TO WATERFRONT NEWS ARTICLES