For Immediate Release -
8/27/2007
Presidio Trust Proposes Revitalization of Tennessee Hollow Watershed
Plans Seek To Balance Natural Resources and Community Use
Presidio
of San Francisco (August 27, 2007) -- The Presidio Trust has
released an Environmental Assessment (EA) for plans to enhance up to
28-acres within the Presidio’s Tennessee Hollow Watershed. The proposal
calls for creek and habitat restoration, new trails, an interpretive
garden, reorganization and rehabilitation of playing fields, picnic
areas and other visitor amenities. The project represents one phase in a
broader effort to restore the Presidio’s largest watershed.
“At Tennessee Hollow we have a unique opportunity
to restore a watershed from headwaters to bay” said Craig Middleton,
Presidio Trust Executive Director. “It will be a wonderful place for
children to learn about history, nature and San Francisco’s creek
system.”
Tennessee Hollow is the Presidio’s largest
watershed, occupying 270 acres or roughly one fifth of the park. It was
named after the first Tennessee Regiment, a group of volunteer soldiers
who made camp there just before shipping out to the Philippines during
the Spanish-American War. The watershed later served as a temporary
housing location for San Franciscans displaced by the 1906 earthquake.
During an earlier time, the watershed and its creeks were an important
resource for native peoples and colonial settlers. Today approximately
half of the Presidio’s creek system is buried in storm drains or
contained in concrete channels. Recent wildlife surveys indicate that
small pockets of remnant habitat within Tennessee Hollow are
ecologically rich and diverse.
“Riparian forest, like that present in Tennessee
Hollow, has been eliminated or extensively degraded around the Bay
Area,“ said Beth Huning of the San Francisco Bay Joint Venture, a
public-private partnership dedicated to the protection and restoration
of the San Francisco Bay Estuary. “This project represents a unique
opportunity to restore scarce and highly valuable riparian habitat in an
urbanized area. The project’s proximity to the Crissy Field saltwater
marsh and the Bay contributes to regional efforts to establish a diverse
mosaic of habitat along the edge of one of our nation’s most
biologically significant estuaries.”
The Trust invites public comment on the project and
EA through October 9, 2007. Self-guided and guided hiking tours of the
watershed are available. Please visit www.presidio.gov
for more information. The Trust will host a public meeting to accept
comments on the EA on October 2, 2007.
The Presidio Trust was established by the United
States Congress in 1994 to manage the Presidio of San Francisco, a
former army base located at the base of the Golden Gate Bridge. The
1,500-acre site contains the infrastructure of a small city as well as
expansive open space, a 300-acre historic forest, spectacular views, and
rare and endangered plants and wildlife. It comprises nearly 6 million
square feet of buildings, including 469 historic structures that
contribute to its status as a National Historic Landmark District,
making it unlike any other national park. In establishing the Trust,
Congress mandated that it make the park financially self-sufficient by
2013. The Trust is the only federal agency with this mandate.