

#MCLAUGHLIN EASTSHORE STATE SEASHORE HOW TO#
It lists all of the California State parks (even the ones under development) along with a map and travel tips for how to plan your park visit. Portions of this section of the Bay Trail are now being designed.This insanely thorough list of California State Parks will help you find your own perfect park. Additions to the San Francisco Bay Trail will likely be the next park facilities to come online as environmental remediation projects are completed. Isabel Regional Shoreline to the Richmond Marina. The first portion of the park to be opened to the public by the East Bay Regional Park District was the multi-use trail connecting Pt. Walking paths and interpretive signs welcome the public. The finished meadow has seasonal wetlands, coastal prairie, and coastal scrub areas, creating a diverse and thriving habitat for plants and animals in an urban area. The 72-acre meadow, a former landfill site, was restored in three phases over five years at a cost of $6,000,000. A three-phase restoration plan was completed in 2011. Habitats in the Meadow consisted of non-native weeds, small patches of native vegetation, and several seasonal wetlands that had developed atop the subsiding landfill. Hazardous materials were removed in 1998. The 72-acre Berkeley Meadow was operated by the City of Berkeley until the 1960s. The Berkeley Meadow Habitat Restoration is one such project that improved public access and ecological habitats in the Berkeley Meadow. The East Bay Regional Park District is enhancing and restoring a number of ecosystems and habitat types throughout the park.

The park does not yet include the Albany Bulb. The City of Albany currently owns and operates the Albany Bulb which is adjacent to but outside of the park boundaries. The Park District is the operator of the park using funds from the Park District's Measure CC, approved by District voters in 2004. Albany Beach Habitat Restoration and Public Access Project.The McLaughlin Eastshore State Park General Plan identifies the future preservation, conservation, and recreation uses and improvements for the park. The East Bay Regional Park District, acting as agent for the State, used funds from the Park District's 1988 Measure AA and state park bonds to acquire the property and clean up contaminated areas at a cost of more than $33 million. The park parallels the most heavily traveled corridor in the East Bay, making it a highly visible, highly accessible area of parkland. It includes 1,833 acres of uplands and tidelands along the waterfronts of Oakland, Emeryville, Berkeley, Albany, and Richmond. The park extends 8.5 miles along the East Bay shoreline from the Bay Bridge to Richmond. On October 3, 2012, the California State Park and Recreation Commission renamed this 8.5-mile shoreline parkland McLaughlin Eastshore State Park in honor of Save The Bay co-founder Sylvia McLaughlin. It is located in the midst of one of the most highly urbanized areas of California. The newly designated State seashore is a recreational facility harmonious with its natural setting. Over 4,000 major stakeholders and interested parties reached a substantial consensus on the future uses and improvements for the park. It is the result of decades of citizen efforts to protect San Francisco Bay as a public open space resource. McLaughlin Eastshore State Park is one of the most outstanding achievements in the history of open space protection.
