No edit summary
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
|
m →top
|
||
(19 intermediate revisions by 15 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Former US Naval Air Station in Alameda, California}} |
|||
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2012}} |
|||
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2021}} |
|||
{{Infobox airport |
|||
{{Infobox military installation |
|||
|name = Naval Air Station Alameda |
|||
| |
| name = Naval Air Station Alameda |
||
| |
| ensign = |
||
| |
| ensign_size = |
||
| |
| native_name = Nimitz Field |
||
| partof = <!-- for elements within a larger site --> |
|||
|ICAO = {{strikethrough color|KNGZ}} |
|||
| |
| location = [[Alameda, California|Alameda]], [[California]] |
||
| nearest_town = <!-- used in military test site infobox --> |
|||
|operator = [[United States Navy]] |
|||
| country = the United States |
|||
|location = [[Alameda, California]] |
|||
| image = File:Alameda NAS Vought A7 Corsair II guardian (3374934106) (2).jpg |
|||
|used = 1940<ref name="shettle">{{cite web|url=http://www.militarymuseum.org/NASAlameda.html|title=California State Military Museum|publisher=M.L.Shettle|access-date=2011-08-02}}</ref> – 1997 |
|||
| alt = |
|||
|elevation-f = |
|||
| caption = An [[LTV A-7 Corsair II|A-7 Corsair II]] [[gate guardian]] at the former NAS Alameda during 2006 |
|||
|elevation-m = |
|||
| image2 = [[File:Naval air station alameda emblem.jpg|175px]] |
|||
|coordinates = {{Coord|37|47|10|N|122|19|07|W|type:airport_region:US-CA|display=inline,title}} |
|||
| alt2 = |
|||
|r1-number = 13/31 |
|||
| caption2 = |
|||
|r1-length-f = 8,000 |
|||
| type = [[Naval air station#United States Navy|Naval air station]] |
|||
|r1-length-m = 2,438 |
|||
| coordinates = {{Coord|37|47|10|N|122|19|07|W|type:airport_region:US-CA|display=inline,title}} |
|||
|r1-surface = Asphalt |
|||
| gridref = |
|||
|r2-number = 07/25 |
|||
| image_map = |
|||
|r2-length-f = 7,200 |
|||
| image_mapsize = |
|||
|r2-length-m = 2,195 |
|||
| image_map_alt = |
|||
|r2-surface = Asphalt |
|||
| image_map_caption = |
|||
|footnotes = |
|||
| pushpin_map = United States |
|||
| pushpin_mapsize = |
|||
| pushpin_map_alt = |
|||
| pushpin_map_caption = Location in the United States |
|||
| pushpin_relief = |
|||
| pushpin_image = |
|||
| pushpin_label = Alameda |
|||
| pushpin_label_position = |
|||
| pushpin_mark = |
|||
| pushpin_marksize = |
|||
| ownership = [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] |
|||
| operator = [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]] |
|||
| controlledby = <!-- such as RAF Bomber Command or the Eighth Air Force --> |
|||
| open_to_public = <!-- for out of use sites/sites with museums etc --> |
|||
| site_other_label = <!-- for renaming "Other facilities" in infobox --> |
|||
| site_other = <!-- for other sorts of facilities – radar types etc --> |
|||
| site_area = <!-- area of site m2, km2 square mile etc --> |
|||
| code = <!--facility/installation code, applies to US --> |
|||
| built = 1927 (as Alameda Airport) |
|||
| used = {{Start date|1940}}–{{End date|1997}} |
|||
| builder = |
|||
| materials = |
|||
| height = <!-- height of tallest part, not above sea level --> |
|||
| length = <!-- for border fences or other DMZs --> |
|||
| fate = Transferred to [[Alameda, California|City of Alameda]] for redevelopment ([[Alameda Point, Alameda, California|Alameda Point]]) |
|||
| condition = Closed |
|||
| battles = |
|||
| events = |
|||
| past_commanders = <!-- past notable commander(s) --> |
|||
| garrison = <!-- such as the 25th Bombardment Group --> |
|||
| occupants = <!-- squadrons only --> |
|||
| designations = |
|||
<!-- begin airfield information --> |
|||
| IATA = NGZ |
|||
| ICAO = KNGZ |
|||
| FAA = |
|||
| TC = |
|||
| LID = |
|||
| GPS = |
|||
| WMO = 745060 |
|||
| elevation = <!-- {{Convert| |m|0}} --> |
|||
| r1-number = 13/31 |
|||
| r1-length = {{Convert|2,438|m|0}} |
|||
| r1-surface = [[Asphalt concrete|Asphalt]] |
|||
| r2-number = 07/25 |
|||
| r2-length = {{Convert|2,195|m|0}} |
|||
| r2-surface = Asphalt |
|||
| h1-number = |
|||
| h1-length = <!-- {{Convert| |m|0}} --> |
|||
| h1-surface = |
|||
| airfield_other_label = <!-- for renaming "Other facilities" in infobox --> |
|||
| airfield_other = <!-- for other sorts of airfield facilities --> |
|||
<!-- end airfield information --> |
|||
| footnotes = <!-- catchall in case it's needed to preserve something in infobox that doesn't work in new code --> |
|||
{{Infobox designation list |
|||
| embed = yes |
|||
| designation1 = NRHP |
|||
| designation2 = NHLD |
|||
| designation2_offname = |
|||
| designation2_date = 23 January 2013 |
|||
| designation2_number = [https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/12001191 12001191] |
|||
| designation2_free1name = Period |
|||
| designation2_free1value = 1900– |
|||
| designation2_free2name = Area of significance |
|||
| designation2_free2value = {{hlist|Architecture|Community Planning and Development|Landscape Architecture|Military}} |
|||
| designation3 = CHISL |
|||
| designation3_offname = [[China Clipper flight departure site|Site of the China Clipper flight departure]] |
|||
| designation3_date = 5 November 1985 |
|||
| designation3_number = [http://ohp.parks.ca.gov/ListedResources/Detail/968 968] |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
}} |
|||
'''Naval Air Station Alameda''' ('''NAS Alameda''') was a [[United States Navy]] [[Naval Air Station]] in [[Alameda, California]], on [[San Francisco Bay]].<ref>{{cite gnis|type=retired|id=1680357|name=Alameda Naval Air Station (historical)|access-date=3 May 2009}}</ref> |
|||
NAS Alameda had two [[runway]]s: 13–31 measuring {{convert|8000|×|200|ft|m|abbr=on}} and 07-25 measuring {{convert|7200|×|200|ft|m|abbr=on}}. Two [[helicopter pad]]s and a [[control tower]] were also part of the facilities. |
|||
'''Naval Air Station Alameda''' ('''NAS Alameda''') was a [[United States Navy]] [[Naval Air Station]] in [[Alameda, California]], on [[San Francisco Bay]].<ref>{{cite gnis|id=1680357|name=Alameda Naval Air Station (historical)|access-date=3 May 2009}}</ref> |
|||
NAS Alameda had two [[runway]]s: 13–31 measuring {{convert|8,000|×|200|ft|m|abbr=on}} and 07-25 measuring {{convert|7,200|×|200|ft|m|abbr=on}}. Two [[helicopter pad]]s and a [[control tower]] were also part of the facilities. |
|||
==History== |
==History== |
||
In 1927, [[wetland]]s at the west end of Alameda Island on the east shore of [[San Francisco Bay]] were [[reclaimed land|filled]] to form an airport ('''Alameda Airport''') with an east–west runway, three [[hangar]]s, an administration building, and a yacht harbor. The airport site included the [[Alameda Terminal]] of the [[First |
In 1927, [[wetland]]s at the west end of Alameda Island on the east shore of [[San Francisco Bay]] were [[reclaimed land|filled]] to form an airport ('''Alameda Airport''') with an east–west runway, three [[hangar]]s, an administration building, and a yacht harbor. The airport site included the [[Alameda Terminal]] of the [[First transcontinental railroad]] ([[California Historical Landmark]] #440). By 1930, [[United States Army Air Corps]] operations referred to the site as '''Benton Field'''. [[Pan American World Airways]] used the yacht harbor as the California terminal for ''[[China Clipper]]'' trans-Pacific flights beginning in 1935. The [[China Clipper flight departure site|''China Clipper'' terminal]] is designated California Historical Landmark #968. |
||
On June |
On1 June 1936, the city of [[Alameda, California]] ceded the airport to the United States government a few months before the Army discontinued operations from the field. Pan American World Airways shifted its terminal to [[Treasure Island (California)|Treasure Island]] in 1939 for the [[Golden Gate International Exposition]]. Congressional appropriations passed in 1938 for construction of [[naval air station]] facilities for two [[carrier air wing]]s, five [[seaplane]] squadrons and two utility squadrons. Appropriations were increased in 1940 for construction of two seaplane hangars and an [[aircraft carrier]] berthing pier. Naval operations began on1 November 1940.<ref name="shettle">{{cite web|url=http://www.militarymuseum.org/NASAlameda.html|title=California State Military Museum|publisher=M.L.Shettle|access-date=2011-08-02}}</ref> – 1997 Fleet Air Wing 8 began patrol and scouting missions following the [[attack on Pearl Harbor]]. In April 1942, {{USS|Hornet|CV-8|6}} loaded at Alameda the 16 [[North American B-25 Mitchell|B-25]] aircraft that would take part in the [[Doolittle Raid]] on Japan.<ref name="shettle"/> From August through December 1944, future US President [[Richard Nixon]] was assigned to Fleet Air Wing 8 at Naval Air Station Alameda, California.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://navylive.dodlive.mil/2019/02/18/the-naval-careers-of-americas-six-sailor-presidents/|title=The Naval Careers of America's Six Sailor Presidents|publisher=US Navy|access-date=2019-12-19}}</ref> |
||
Air support training unit No. 2 at Alameda included the fleet [[radar]] operator's school, [[Link Trainer|Link]] [[celestial navigation]] trainer school, and aviation [[storekeeper]] school.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USN/ref/USN-Act/CA.html|title=U.S. Naval Activities World War II by State|publisher=Patrick Clancey|access-date=2012-03-19}}</ref> As [[World War II]] continued, Alameda became headquarters for a system of auxiliary airfields:<ref name="shettle"/> |
Air support training unit No. 2 at Alameda included the fleet [[radar]] operator's school, [[Link Trainer|Link]] [[celestial navigation]] trainer school, and aviation [[storekeeper]] school.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USN/ref/USN-Act/CA.html|title=U.S. Naval Activities World War II by State|publisher=Patrick Clancey|access-date=2012-03-19}}</ref> As [[World War II]] continued, Alameda became headquarters for a system of auxiliary airfields:<ref name="shettle"/> |
||
[[File:US carriers at Alameda 1974 (colour).jpg|thumb|Carriers {{USS|Coral Sea|CV-43|2}}, {{USS|Hancock|CV-19|2}}, {{USS|Oriskany|CV-34|2}} and {{USS|Enterprise|CVN-65|2}} at Alameda, in 1974]] |
|||
* [[Naval Auxiliary Air Station Arcata]] |
* [[Naval Auxiliary Air Station Arcata]] |
||
Line 60: | Line 127: | ||
Alameda remained an important naval base through the [[Cold War]]. From 1949 to 1953, the Navy based the [[Lockheed R6V Constitution]]—the largest airplane ever listed on the Navy inventory—at NAS Alameda. The two prototypes regularly flew between nearby [[NAS Moffett Field]] and [[Pearl Harbor]], Hawaii. |
Alameda remained an important naval base through the [[Cold War]]. From 1949 to 1953, the Navy based the [[Lockheed R6V Constitution]]—the largest airplane ever listed on the Navy inventory—at NAS Alameda. The two prototypes regularly flew between nearby [[NAS Moffett Field]] and [[Pearl Harbor]], Hawaii. |
||
[[File:US carriers at Alameda 1974 (colour).jpg|thumb|Carriers {{USS|Coral Sea|CV-43|2}}, {{USS|Hancock|CV-19|2}}, {{USS|Oriskany|CV-34|2}} and {{USS|Enterprise|CVN-65|2}} at Alameda, in 1974|left]] |
|||
During the [[Vietnam War]] portion of the Cold War and its later post-Vietnam era, the base was homeport to the aircraft carriers {{USS|Coral Sea|CV-43|2}}, {{USS|Hancock|CVA-19|2}}, {{USS|Oriskany|CV-34|2}}, {{USS|Enterprise|CVN-65|2}}, {{USS|Ranger|CV-61|2}}, and {{USS|Carl Vinson||2}}. NAS Alameda also housed a major aircraft overhaul facility employing thousand of civilian employees that was known as '''Naval Air Rework Facility''' ('''NARF''') '''Alameda''' and later renamed '''Naval Aviation Depot''' ('''NADEP''') '''Alameda'''.<ref name="shettle"/> |
During the [[Vietnam War]] portion of the Cold War and its later post-Vietnam era, the base was homeport to the aircraft carriers {{USS|Coral Sea|CV-43|2}}, {{USS|Hancock|CVA-19|2}}, {{USS|Oriskany|CV-34|2}}, {{USS|Enterprise|CVN-65|2}}, {{USS|Ranger|CV-61|2}}, and {{USS|Carl Vinson||2}}. NAS Alameda also housed a major aircraft overhaul facility employing thousand of civilian employees that was known as '''Naval Air Rework Facility''' ('''NARF''') '''Alameda''' and later renamed '''Naval Aviation Depot''' ('''NADEP''') '''Alameda'''.<ref name="shettle"/> |
||
Line 65: | Line 134: | ||
The base was also the focus for northern California [[United States Navy Reserve|Naval Air Reserve]] operations after 1961, hosting various Reserve Force Squadrons attached to Carrier Air Wing Reserve 30 (CVWR-30), also known as CAG-30, equipped with aircraft such as the [[A-3 Skywarrior|KA-3 Skywarrior]]...later replaced by the [[A-6 Intruder]], and the [[A-4 Skyhawk]]...later replaced by [[A-7 Corsair II]]. Other Naval Air Reserve Force Squadrons external to CVWR-30 flew the [[Sikorsky H-34]] Sea Horse...later replaced by the [[SH-3 Sea King]], the [[CH-53 Sea Stallion]], and [[MH-53E Sea Dragon]]. Another land-based squadron under Fleet Logistics Support Wing flew the [[C-9 Skytrain II]]. In the 1960s, a Naval Air Reserve unit also flew the [[P-2 Neptune]] before relocating to nearby [[NAS Moffett Field]], transitioning to the [[P-3 Orion]], and being established as Reserve patrol squadron in 1970. Runways were lengthened for jet aircraft, and the airfield was renamed '''Nimitz Field''' in 1967 following the death of [[Fleet Admiral]] [[Chester W. Nimitz]]. |
The base was also the focus for northern California [[United States Navy Reserve|Naval Air Reserve]] operations after 1961, hosting various Reserve Force Squadrons attached to Carrier Air Wing Reserve 30 (CVWR-30), also known as CAG-30, equipped with aircraft such as the [[A-3 Skywarrior|KA-3 Skywarrior]]...later replaced by the [[A-6 Intruder]], and the [[A-4 Skyhawk]]...later replaced by [[A-7 Corsair II]]. Other Naval Air Reserve Force Squadrons external to CVWR-30 flew the [[Sikorsky H-34]] Sea Horse...later replaced by the [[SH-3 Sea King]], the [[CH-53 Sea Stallion]], and [[MH-53E Sea Dragon]]. Another land-based squadron under Fleet Logistics Support Wing flew the [[C-9 Skytrain II]]. In the 1960s, a Naval Air Reserve unit also flew the [[P-2 Neptune]] before relocating to nearby [[NAS Moffett Field]], transitioning to the [[P-3 Orion]], and being established as Reserve patrol squadron in 1970. Runways were lengthened for jet aircraft, and the airfield was renamed '''Nimitz Field''' in 1967 following the death of [[Fleet Admiral]] [[Chester W. Nimitz]]. |
||
The base was closed in 1997 pursuant to [[Base Realignment and Closure |
The base was closed in 1997 pursuant to [[Base Realignment and Closure]] action. Its runways were also closed and the airfield was not reutilized as a civilian airport.<ref>[http://alamedanavalairmuseum.org/history Alameda Air Station Alameda History]</ref> |
||
==Post-closure uses== |
==Post-closure uses== |
||
Line 71: | Line 140: | ||
[[File:Port of Oakland and Alameda Island aerial.jpg|thumb|left|Aerial view with [[Port of Oakland]] and the bay]] |
[[File:Port of Oakland and Alameda Island aerial.jpg|thumb|left|Aerial view with [[Port of Oakland]] and the bay]] |
||
After the base closed on |
After the base closed on 25 April 1997, {{USS|Hornet|CV-12|6}} was given to the former air station to be used as a [[museum ship]], the [[USS Hornet Museum|USS ''Hornet'' Museum]]. |
||
The television series ''[[MythBusters]]'' often conducted vehicle-based experiments on the grounds of the station (referred to on-air as the "Alameda Runway"), due to the extensive safety zone that could be set up around the test site. For the same reason, this location has been used as a checkpoint for the [[Bullrun Rally|Bullrun rally]] race; the lengthy airstrip allowed for the staging of a challenge involving chasing a [[semi-trailer]]. |
The television series ''[[MythBusters]]'' often conducted vehicle-based experiments on the grounds of the station (referred to on-air as the "Alameda Runway"), due to the extensive safety zone that could be set up around the test site. For the same reason, this location has been used as a checkpoint for the [[Bullrun Rally|Bullrun rally]] race; the lengthy airstrip allowed for the staging of a challenge involving chasing a [[semi-trailer]]. |
||
Line 79: | Line 148: | ||
Since 2000, the city of Alameda has been planning the redevelopment of the former Naval Air Station, now known as [[Alameda Point]]. Complicating the redevelopment are several constraints: land-use constraints consisting of Tidelands Trust; soil and groundwater contamination; wildlife refuge buffer requirements; geotechnical issues; 100-year flood plans; institutional and contractual constraints with Alameda Measure A, the Alameda Naval Air Station Historic District and existing residents and leases. |
Since 2000, the city of Alameda has been planning the redevelopment of the former Naval Air Station, now known as [[Alameda Point]]. Complicating the redevelopment are several constraints: land-use constraints consisting of Tidelands Trust; soil and groundwater contamination; wildlife refuge buffer requirements; geotechnical issues; 100-year flood plans; institutional and contractual constraints with Alameda Measure A, the Alameda Naval Air Station Historic District and existing residents and leases. |
||
In August 2001, Alameda selected Alameda Point Community Partners (APCP) as the master developer for the property. APCP was a partnership of financier Morgan Stanley, Shea Homes of Livermore, Centex Homes of Dallas and the Industrial Realty Group. The development was estimated to cost $2 billion and take 15 years to complete. Alameda Point Community Partners was selected over Catellus and Harbor Bay/Lennar, and signed a two-year exclusive negotiating contract as the property's master developer. |
In August 2001, Alameda selected Alameda Point Community Partners (APCP) as the master developer for the property. APCP was a partnership of financier Morgan Stanley, Shea Homes of Livermore, Centex Homes of Dallas and the Industrial Realty Group. The development was estimated to cost $2 billion and take 15 years to complete. Alameda Point Community Partners was selected over Catellus and Harbor Bay/[[Lennar]], and signed a two-year exclusive negotiating contract as the property's master developer. |
||
By 2005, only Shea Homes and Centex Homes were working on redevelopment plans, and a Preliminary Development Concept called for building 1,700 homes on the site. In July 2006, the City of Alameda and the Navy agreed to a $108 million purchase deal. In September 2006, APCP decided that it would not move forward with the development plan identified in the Preliminary Development Concept and withdrew from the project. |
By 2005, only Shea Homes and Centex Homes were working on redevelopment plans, and a Preliminary Development Concept called for building 1,700 homes on the site. In July 2006, the City of Alameda and the Navy agreed to a $108 million purchase deal. In September 2006, APCP decided that it would not move forward with the development plan identified in the Preliminary Development Concept and withdrew from the project. |
||
Line 88: | Line 157: | ||
==Superfund cleanup site== |
==Superfund cleanup site== |
||
NAS Alameda was listed as a [[Superfund]] cleanup site on |
NAS Alameda was listed as a [[Superfund]] cleanup site on 22 July 1999. 25 locations on the base were identified as needing [[Environmental remediation|remediation]]. The largest of the individual locations is the West Beach Landfill which occupies approximately 110 acres (44.5 ha) in the southwestern corner of the base. Tests of the landfill indicate [[polychlorinated biphenyl]] (PCB) contamination.<ref>{{cite web|title=NPL Site Narrative for Alameda Naval Air Station|work =National Priorities List|publisher=[[United States Environmental Protection Agency]]|date=24 February 2006|url=http://www.epa.gov/superfund/sites/npl/nar1560.htm|access-date=10 August 2007}}</ref> |
||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
{{Portal|San Francisco Bay Area|Aviation |
{{Portal|San Francisco Bay Area|Aviation}} |
||
* [[Alameda Naval Hospital]] |
|||
* [[List of airports in the San Francisco Bay Area]] |
|||
* [[San Francisco Naval Shipyard]] |
|||
* [[Base Realignment and Closure]] |
|||
*[[Alameda Naval Hospital]] |
|||
*[[California during World War II]] |
|||
*[[American Theater (1939–1945)]] |
*[[American Theater (1939–1945)]] |
||
*[[California during World War II]] |
|||
*[[List of airports in the San Francisco Bay Area]] |
|||
*[[List of United States Navy airfields]] |
|||
*[[San Francisco Naval Shipyard]] |
|||
*[[United States home front during World War II]] |
*[[United States home front during World War II]] |
||
Line 103: | Line 172: | ||
{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
||
* [http://www.militarymuseum.org/NASAlameda.html; USS Hornet history] |
* [http://www.militarymuseum.org/NASAlameda.html; USS Hornet history]{{Dead link|date=October 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} |
||
==References== |
==References== |
||
Line 127: | Line 196: | ||
[[Category:Superfund sites in California]] |
[[Category:Superfund sites in California]] |
||
[[Category:Military facilities in the San Francisco Bay Area]] |
[[Category:Military facilities in the San Francisco Bay Area]] |
||
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places in Alameda |
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places in Alameda, California]] |
||
[[Category:World War II on the National Register of Historic Places in California]] |
[[Category:World War II on the National Register of Historic Places in California]] |
||
[[Category:Transportation buildings and structures in Alameda County, California]] |
[[Category:Transportation buildings and structures in Alameda County, California]] |
Naval Air Station Alameda | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nimitz Field
| |||||||||
Alameda, California in the United States | |||||||||
Location in the United States | |||||||||
Coordinates | 37°47′10″N 122°19′07″W / 37.78611°N 122.31861°W / 37.78611; -122.31861 | ||||||||
Type | Naval air station | ||||||||
Site information | |||||||||
Owner | Department of Defense | ||||||||
Operator | U.S. Navy | ||||||||
Condition | Closed | ||||||||
Site history | |||||||||
Built | 1927 (as Alameda Airport) | ||||||||
In use | 1940 (1940)–1997 (1997) | ||||||||
Fate | Transferred to City of Alameda for redevelopment (Alameda Point) | ||||||||
Airfield information | |||||||||
Identifiers | IATA: NGZ, ICAO: KNGZ, WMO: 745060 | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Designated | 23 January 2013 | ||||||||
Reference no. | 12001191 | ||||||||
Period | 1900– | ||||||||
Area of significance |
| ||||||||
Official name | Site of the China Clipper flight departure | ||||||||
Designated | 5 November 1985 | ||||||||
Reference no. | 968 | ||||||||
Naval Air Station Alameda (NAS Alameda) was a United States Navy Naval Air StationinAlameda, California, on San Francisco Bay.[1]
NAS Alameda had two runways: 13–31 measuring 8,000 ft × 200 ft (2,438 m × 61 m) and 07-25 measuring 7,200 ft × 200 ft (2,195 m × 61 m). Two helicopter pads and a control tower were also part of the facilities.
In 1927, wetlands at the west end of Alameda Island on the east shore of San Francisco Bay were filled to form an airport (Alameda Airport) with an east–west runway, three hangars, an administration building, and a yacht harbor. The airport site included the Alameda Terminal of the First transcontinental railroad (California Historical Landmark #440). By 1930, United States Army Air Corps operations referred to the site as Benton Field. Pan American World Airways used the yacht harbor as the California terminal for China Clipper trans-Pacific flights beginning in 1935. The China Clipper terminal is designated California Historical Landmark #968.
On 1 June 1936, the city of Alameda, California ceded the airport to the United States government a few months before the Army discontinued operations from the field. Pan American World Airways shifted its terminal to Treasure Island in 1939 for the Golden Gate International Exposition. Congressional appropriations passed in 1938 for construction of naval air station facilities for two carrier air wings, five seaplane squadrons and two utility squadrons. Appropriations were increased in 1940 for construction of two seaplane hangars and an aircraft carrier berthing pier. Naval operations began on 1 November 1940.[2] – 1997 Fleet Air Wing 8 began patrol and scouting missions following the attack on Pearl Harbor. In April 1942, USS Hornet loaded at Alameda the 16 B-25 aircraft that would take part in the Doolittle Raid on Japan.[2] From August through December 1944, future US President Richard Nixon was assigned to Fleet Air Wing 8 at Naval Air Station Alameda, California.[3]
Air support training unit No. 2 at Alameda included the fleet radar operator's school, Link celestial navigation trainer school, and aviation storekeeper school.[4]AsWorld War II continued, Alameda became headquarters for a system of auxiliary airfields:[2]
Alameda remained an important naval base through the Cold War. From 1949 to 1953, the Navy based the Lockheed R6V Constitution—the largest airplane ever listed on the Navy inventory—at NAS Alameda. The two prototypes regularly flew between nearby NAS Moffett Field and Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
During the Vietnam War portion of the Cold War and its later post-Vietnam era, the base was homeport to the aircraft carriers Coral Sea, Hancock, Oriskany, Enterprise, Ranger, and Carl Vinson. NAS Alameda also housed a major aircraft overhaul facility employing thousand of civilian employees that was known as Naval Air Rework Facility (NARF) Alameda and later renamed Naval Aviation Depot (NADEP) Alameda.[2]
The base was also the focus for northern California Naval Air Reserve operations after 1961, hosting various Reserve Force Squadrons attached to Carrier Air Wing Reserve 30 (CVWR-30), also known as CAG-30, equipped with aircraft such as the KA-3 Skywarrior...later replaced by the A-6 Intruder, and the A-4 Skyhawk...later replaced by A-7 Corsair II. Other Naval Air Reserve Force Squadrons external to CVWR-30 flew the Sikorsky H-34 Sea Horse...later replaced by the SH-3 Sea King, the CH-53 Sea Stallion, and MH-53E Sea Dragon. Another land-based squadron under Fleet Logistics Support Wing flew the C-9 Skytrain II. In the 1960s, a Naval Air Reserve unit also flew the P-2 Neptune before relocating to nearby NAS Moffett Field, transitioning to the P-3 Orion, and being established as Reserve patrol squadron in 1970. Runways were lengthened for jet aircraft, and the airfield was renamed Nimitz Field in 1967 following the death of Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz.
The base was closed in 1997 pursuant to Base Realignment and Closure action. Its runways were also closed and the airfield was not reutilized as a civilian airport.[5]
After the base closed on 25 April 1997, USS Hornet was given to the former air station to be used as a museum ship, the USS Hornet Museum.
The television series MythBusters often conducted vehicle-based experiments on the grounds of the station (referred to on-air as the "Alameda Runway"), due to the extensive safety zone that could be set up around the test site. For the same reason, this location has been used as a checkpoint for the Bullrun rally race; the lengthy airstrip allowed for the staging of a challenge involving chasing a semi-trailer.
A two-mile freeway loop was constructed on the base for the filming of a lengthy car chase sequence for the movie The Matrix Reloaded. The loop cost over $1.5 million to construct and was used solely for shooting the film's chase scenes (a seven-week-long process) before it was demolished.[6] The route is still visible on some aerial photography on the former Runway 07/25 and Runway 13/31.
Since 2000, the city of Alameda has been planning the redevelopment of the former Naval Air Station, now known as Alameda Point. Complicating the redevelopment are several constraints: land-use constraints consisting of Tidelands Trust; soil and groundwater contamination; wildlife refuge buffer requirements; geotechnical issues; 100-year flood plans; institutional and contractual constraints with Alameda Measure A, the Alameda Naval Air Station Historic District and existing residents and leases.
In August 2001, Alameda selected Alameda Point Community Partners (APCP) as the master developer for the property. APCP was a partnership of financier Morgan Stanley, Shea Homes of Livermore, Centex Homes of Dallas and the Industrial Realty Group. The development was estimated to cost $2 billion and take 15 years to complete. Alameda Point Community Partners was selected over Catellus and Harbor Bay/Lennar, and signed a two-year exclusive negotiating contract as the property's master developer.
By 2005, only Shea Homes and Centex Homes were working on redevelopment plans, and a Preliminary Development Concept called for building 1,700 homes on the site. In July 2006, the City of Alameda and the Navy agreed to a $108 million purchase deal. In September 2006, APCP decided that it would not move forward with the development plan identified in the Preliminary Development Concept and withdrew from the project.
In May 2007, the city selected SunCal Companies as the master developer from a field of five applicant firms that sought to develop 770 acres (310 ha). In July 2007, the city and SunCal entered into an exclusive negotiating agreement as SunCal began to gather community input and develop preliminary plans.
In August 2010, the Alameda City Council voted to terminate the exclusive negotiating agreement with SunCal and halt its proposal for the former Naval Air Station. Various reasons were cited in the staff report leading up to the vote, including the developer- and city-initiated ballot measure related to the project that was defeated in February 2010 by a margin of 85%.
NAS Alameda was listed as a Superfund cleanup site on 22 July 1999. 25 locations on the base were identified as needing remediation. The largest of the individual locations is the West Beach Landfill which occupies approximately 110 acres (44.5 ha) in the southwestern corner of the base. Tests of the landfill indicate polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) contamination.[7]
| |
---|---|
Commercial |
|
Federal |
|
General aviation (tower) |
|
General aviation (non-tower) |
|
Historical |
|
International |
|
---|---|
National |
|