SaveGatewayValley


PICTURES AND MAPS, page one | page two | page three | page four (location and assorted maps)


old growth C
alifornia Oak
Old growth California Oak
Hundreds of California Oaks over 100 years old and 15 inches in diameter wait for the chain saws.
Marked Tree
Marked for Destruction: a tree already slated for removal.
The Montanera project calls for the destruction of 1,339 ordinance-sized trees (defined by local regulation as trees with a trunk diameter of six inches at any point more than 4.5 feet above the ground). Most of these are old growth native coast live oak, California bay, and willow.
View from Tilden
View from Tilden Park, south east into Gateway Valley
Looking eastward from Lomas Cantadas Road near the edge of Tilden Park.  The continuous open space is an illusion - in reality, the freeway emerging from the Caldecott Tunnel and slicing through the bottom of Siesta Valley presents an impassable barrier for all those who walk or crawl, humans and other species.  Only a narrow, steep band of land along the crest of the Berkeley hills serves as an actual corridor. Gateway Valley offers a buffer near that narrowest part of the corridor, where creatures must pass above the tunnel.
Sketch m
ap
The red star indicates the location of Gateway Valley in relation to the wildlife corridor

Gateway Valley is a critical link in the Greenbelt that makes the Bay Area such a habitable urban area. It is particularly valuable as a wildlife corridor between Tilden and Briones Parks in the north and the San Leandro Watershed and Las Trampas Wilderness in the south. This corridor allows the mingling and breeding that keeps local species alive and healthy throughout the Greenbelt.

View northwest from Gateway Valley, back towards Tilden

View northwest from Gateway Valley, back towards Tilden Park
This is approximately the reverse view to the image above. Highway 24 is between the camera and the far ridge under the clouds but the freeway lies unseen in a road cut.  
Brookside Cr
eek Stream Course
View Up Brookside Creek stream course
The major stream in Gateway Valley is Brookside Creek, a headwater of San Pablo Creek, which flows down through Orinda to the San Pablo Dam. This low gap separates Gateway Valley from Moraga Valley and the headwater of Moraga Creek, which flows through Moraga to the San Leandro Reservoir. The site straddles the divide between the two major watersheds of the region. Ironically, it is across that divide that the applicant proposes to spread a golf course - of all the possible uses of the land, potentially one of the most threatening to water quality.

Quarry view

A view of the old overgrown quarry

To the right of this picture you can see evidence of slumps and landslides, a characteristic of this landscape. Why do the prospective developers want to build on land that is historically very unstable?
golf pole marking
The pole marks one of the proposed golf course's 18 holes.
How much grading and earth-moving will be necessary to turn this sloping hillside into a flat golf green? For obvious reasons, golf is a game for fairly flat terrain: it was invented on grazed-over turf on sandy soil along the rainy coasts of the British Isles. Does it make sense to attempt to force this very different landscape into such a mold? Considering that the average golf course consumes as much water as a city of 6,000 inhabitants, does it make sense to keep building so many of them in a drought-prone region of a state facing the prospect of severe water shortages? 

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The Greenbelt Guardians are an information network and coalition of groups and individuals dedicated to effectively preserving
open space in the hills east of Berkeley and Oakland and west of Orinda and Moraga. Join us in spreading the word.

P.O. Box 14, Canyon CA 94516 | info@savegateway.org