|
Projects:
San Francisco Bay Area:
San Francisco
Hunters Point Shipyard
Shipyard Waterfront Park
Yosemite Slough
Treasure Island
Presidio
Alameda
Alameda Naval Air Station
FISC Annex
East Bay Housing
Oakland
Chinatown
Vallejo
Mare Island Naval Shipyard
Contra Costa County
Concord Naval Weapons Station
Suisun Bay
Mothball Fleet
National:
Military
& the Environment
RABS
International:
Philippines
Okinawa
Hidden Casualties of War
Program Areas:
Environment
Economics
Justice
Education
Public Partnership
War & the Environment
|
HPS
Interpretive Tour Home | Sign 1 | Sign
2|
Hunters Point Shipyard Interpretive Sign Tour
Sign #1: Interpretive Tour Of Hunters Point Shipyard
Take our toxic walking tour of the
Shipyard’s history of environmental pollution. Interpretive signs
are located on the streets neighboring the Shipyard. Each sign
tells the history of the area that the sign overlooks, pointing
out the past and current pollution. Enjoy your walk!
|
The Shipyard’s Past |
 The Navy operated Hunters Point Shipyard from
1939 until 1976. At its peak, the Shipyard employed nearly 18,000
workers, many living in the nearby Bayview-Hunters Point community.
This photograph shows a view of the Shipyard in 1946. From 1976
to 1986, Triple A Machine Shop leased the area as a commercial
ship repair facility. The Shipyard was officially closed in 1991.
Due to the types of activities conducted on
the Shipyard, the ack of environmental laws regulating the use
of hazardous chemicals at that time, and lax enforcement, many
areas of the Shipyard are now contaminated with hazardous wastes.
Before the Navy can return the property to the City of San Francisco,
the contamination must be cleaned up to safe levels.
|
The Shipyard Today: The Parcels |
 Hunters Point Shipyard consists of 936 acres:
503 on land and 433 under water in San Francisco Bay. In 1991,
the Navy divided the facility into six separate parcels, A through
F, to facilitate the cleanup and reuse of the Shipyard. The Navy
is responsible for locating all polluted areas in each parcel
and creating an appropriate clean-up plan. The map shows the parcel
divisions in the Shipyard.
|
| Future of the Shipyard |
 This map was designed by members of the Bayview
Hunters Point Community through a process organized by the Hunters
Point Shipyard Citizens Advisory Committee and San Francisco Redevelopment
Agency. The map shows the types of reuse activities selected for
each area of the Shipyard once it is ready for redevelopment.
The first parcels designated for reuse are Parcel A and the north
west corner of Parcel B. |
This sign has not been installed yet and is currently available for viewing at the Community Window on the Shipyard. Sign has been altered for online presentation. The Interpretive Tour Of Hunters Point Shipyard is part of The Community Window on the Shipyard Cleanup, a project of Arc Ecology funded by a grant from San Francisco Department of the Environment.
|