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Naval Air Station Alameda
Naval Air Station Alameda
from Wikipedia

Naval Air Station Alameda (NAS Alameda) was a United States Navy Naval Air Station mostly in Alameda, California, with a slight portion of it within San Francisco proper, on San Francisco Bay.[1]

Key Information

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.

History

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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] As World 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.

Carriers Coral Sea, Hancock, Oriskany and Enterprise at Alameda, in 1974

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, Carl Vinson and Abraham Lincoln 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]

Post-closure uses

[edit]
The runways and remainder of the Alameda Naval Air Station can be seen at the end of Alameda Island in this aerial view of the port of Oakland, California.
Aerial view with Port of Oakland and the bay

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%.

Superfund cleanup site

[edit]

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]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
![US carriers at Alameda 1974](.assets/US_carriers_at_Alameda_1974_colourcolour Naval Air Station Alameda was a major facility dedicated to , located primarily in , spanning approximately 2,800 acres including submerged lands. Commissioned on November 1, 1940, it functioned as one of the largest and most comprehensive naval air stations worldwide, encompassing aircraft overhaul, repair depots, carrier homeporting, and support for fleet operations until its operational closure on April 30, 1997. During , NAS Alameda played a pivotal role in maintaining naval air power, rapidly expanding its workforce and facilities to overhaul aircraft and engines at peak rates exceeding 2,000,000 man-hours monthly by mid-1945, directly contributing to the "keep 'em flying" imperative following . The station facilitated the loading of sixteen B-25 bombers onto in April 1942 for the , the first U.S. air strike on Japan's homeland, underscoring its logistical significance in early Pacific Theater operations. Postwar, it evolved into a key depot for jet and maintenance, supporting carriers such as , Midway, , and Hancock, while hosting squadrons and manufacturing aircraft parts across 271 trades. In the Cold War era, NAS Alameda served as the final homeport for nuclear-powered carriers including USS Carl Vinson, USS Abraham Lincoln, and USS Arkansas until 1994, handling diverse carrier-based aircraft and seaplane operations with infrastructure like dual 8,000-foot runways and seaplane ramps. Its designation for closure under the 1993 Base Realignment and Closure process reflected post-Cold War force reductions, leading to transfer of most lands to the City of Alameda for redevelopment as Alameda Point, though environmental remediation of contaminants persists on remaining parcels. The site's historic district, encompassing over 300 buildings, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013, preserving its architectural and operational legacy.

Establishment and Early Operations

Site Selection and Construction (1917–1940)

In 1917, local advocate John J. Mulvany proposed developing the tidal marshes west of Alameda into a naval air base, citing the site's strategic advantages in , including sheltered waters, proximity to urban infrastructure in Alameda and Oakland, mild climate, and potential for expansion through . A congressional fact-finding , chaired by James Helm, evaluated West Coast sites and recommended Alameda in the Helm Report, highlighting its superior harbor facilities, industrial support, and transportation links compared to alternatives like those near , , as part of a planned chain of bases from to . The area's flat, low-lying tidal flats—part of the historic Rancho de San Antonio Spanish land grant, previously used for fishing, hunting, and limited industry like an —offered dredgable shallow waters and isolation for large-scale development without dense urban interference. Land acquisition accelerated in the mid-1930s amid rising needs. The City of Alameda transferred tidelands to federal control, enabling the Navy to acquire approximately 1,000 acres in June 1936 for a nominal $1 under Public Resolution No. 19, incorporating the existing Alameda Municipal Airport (deeded by on June 1, 1936) and Benton Field (transferred from the Army Air Corps in October 1936). These prior facilities, established in 1927 (Benton Field, named for Lt. John W. Benton) and 1929 (airport with a breakwater from beached destroyers), provided initial airfields but required integration into a unified naval station. appropriated $15 million in 1937 for a 1,000-man base supporting 200 aircraft and two ships, including an Assembly and Repair Department as precursor to the Depot, though delays arose from lease disputes with civilian operators. The 1938 further designated the site for two carrier groups and five patrol squadrons, emphasizing its deepwater access for seaplane and carrier operations. Construction commenced in February 1938 under E. C. Seibert, involving extensive and filling of over 15 million cubic yards of to create usable land, including a 4,000 by 2,000-foot airfield area and a 3,000 by 1,500-foot using the "Hines" dredge (1,000 horsepower, 1,000 cubic yards per hour). The Bureau of Yards and Docks directed a Beaux-Arts layout with symmetrical, orthogonal zoning in Moderne style, completing the Administration Building (Building 1) in November 1938, seven of ten Bachelor Enlisted Quarters wings in 1939, stone rip-rap seawalls, bulkheads, and initial hangars by 1940. began in April 1941 but followed a modified "I-over-X" configuration adapted for , with the station commissioned on November 1, 1940, under Captain Frank R. McCrary despite ongoing work; an emergency $17 million expansion was approved in July 1940 amid European war threats. By late 1940, core facilities supported initial operations, though full completion and additional reclamation (over 348 acres by September 1941) extended into 1941.

Commissioning and Pre-War Activities (1940–1941)

Naval Air Station Alameda was officially commissioned on November 1, 1940, under the command of Captain Frank R. McCrary, with Commander John G. Farrell serving as executive officer. The ceremony marked the raising of the flag on a newly erected pole, initiating operations with an initial complement of approximately 390 sailors and Marines, supplemented by civilian workers in the Assembly and Repair (A&R) Department. At commissioning, facilities remained minimal, as ongoing construction from earlier dredging and landfilling efforts—initiated in 1938—continued to expand the site's marshland into usable airfield and support areas. Pre-war activities centered on establishing and logistical amid escalating global tensions. In July 1940, an emergency $17 million contract was approved to hasten of hangars, workshops, and support buildings, enabling the station to service up to 200 and two ships under peacetime plans. The A&R Department, housed initially in Building 5, focused on aircraft overhaul and parts fabrication, employing workers skilled in 271 trades to repair and manufacture components using modern assembly-line methods. The station's first operational milestone occurred on January 8, 1941, when the A&R Department received its inaugural work order to overhaul a Curtiss SOC Seagull observation aircraft, a task completed by May 14, 1941. By December 1941, personnel had expanded to around 2,000, with the department capable of overhauling one attack aircraft daily or 1.5 patrol aircraft every other day, positioning the base for rapid wartime scaling while conducting routine maintenance and training in the months prior to U.S. entry into World War II.

World War II Contributions

Training, Maintenance, and Logistics Support

The Assembly and Repair (A&R) Department at Naval Air Station Alameda, established in , functioned as a major and overhaul facility during , processing approximately 24,000 through repairs, modifications, and custom part fabrication to sustain Pacific Fleet operations. Beginning with 200 personnel and an initial capacity of 14 repairs per month by , the department expanded to over 9,000 civilian workers by the war's end, with facilities growing from 204,000 to more than 1,000,000 square feet. Key activities encompassed engine overhauls (peaking at 2,027 in fiscal year 1945), propeller and instrument repairs, life raft and servicing, and adaptations such as those for Grumman F6F Hellcats, Consolidated PBY Catalinas, and TBM Avengers. NAS Alameda also provided specialized training through Air Support Training Unit No. 2, which operated schools for fleet radar operators, celestial navigation using Link trainers, and aviation storekeepers to prepare support personnel for combat roles. These programs addressed the Navy's need for skilled technicians and navigators amid rapid wartime expansion, drawing on the station's proximity to San Francisco Bay for practical instruction in radar and navigation relevant to carrier and patrol operations. Logistics support centered on air transport capabilities under the Naval Air Transport Service, with Squadron VR-2 based at Alameda from 1942 to ferry supplies and personnel , complemented by VR-5's commissioning on June 24, 1943, for extended logistics missions. The station's , including ramps and auxiliary airfield coordination, facilitated efficient staging and resupply for carrier groups like those deploying from Alameda piers. This integrated maintenance, training, and transport framework enabled NAS Alameda to overhaul up to 17 aircraft daily at peak efficiency, directly contributing to the Navy's operational tempo in the Pacific theater.

Role in Key Pacific Operations

Naval Air Station Alameda played a critical logistical role in the , the first U.S. bombing mission against the Japanese home islands on April 18, 1942. In late March 1942, USS Hornet (CV-8) arrived at the station, where 16 Army B-25 Mitchell bombers under James H. Doolittle were loaded onto the carrier's flight deck for transport toward . This modification and embarkation process, completed by April 2, enabled the task force—comprising Hornet, USS Enterprise (CV-6), and supporting vessels—to depart Alameda and launch the raid from a position farther east than planned due to early detection by a Japanese picket vessel. The operation boosted Allied morale and forced to divert resources for homeland defense, indirectly supporting subsequent Pacific campaigns like the , where Hornet participated after returning stateside. As a primary trans-Pacific terminal, Alameda facilitated the movement of combat aircraft and personnel to forward bases in and the South Pacific, with Patrol Wing 8 (PatWing-8) headquarters relocating there in December 1941 to coordinate these efforts. By war's end, approximately 75 percent of trans-Pacific aircraft ing operations originated or transited through the station, enabling rapid reinforcement of squadrons for key engagements such as the and island-hopping offensives. Patrol Squadron 44 (VP-44), the first such unit based at Alameda on December 7, 1941, exemplified this, transitioning to PBY-5 Catalinas equipped for night operations and deploying to patrol zones that screened Allied advances. The station's aviation depot overhauled engines and airframes, ensuring airframes like PBY Catalinas and carrier-based fighters reached operational readiness for reconnaissance, bombing, and anti-submarine roles in the theater. Alameda's carrier piers and maintenance facilities further supported Pacific carrier task forces by staging aircraft and conducting pre-deployment repairs for vessels bound for battles like the in June 1944. Squadrons such as VP-61, which departed Alameda in August 1942 for forward areas, conducted long-range patrols that provided early warning and strike capabilities against Japanese shipping, contributing to the attrition of enemy logistics in the Solomons and . These efforts, underpinned by the station's capacity to process thousands of aircraft annually, sustained the U.S. Navy's air superiority in the Pacific despite initial losses at and .

Post-War and Cold War Era

Korean War and Vietnam Support

During the , Naval Air Station Alameda rapidly mobilized to support Pacific Fleet aviation operations following North Korea's invasion on June 25, 1950. The station's Overhaul and Repair (O&R) facility modernized 269 from storage reserves within six months, enabling Carrier Division Three to launch the U.S. Navy's initial strikes against North Korean targets on July 3, 1950. In early 1951, O&R processed modifications on 130 specifically for Korean theater deployment, including North American FJ and Grumman F9F jet fighters, while the workforce expanded by 1,000 civilian employees in a single month to sustain 48-hour workweeks with 10-hour shifts. Squadrons such as VF-874, operating from Alameda, deployed aboard carriers like USS Bon Homme Richard with F4U-5N Corsairs and AD Skyraiders for combat missions. Additionally, loaded 146 F-51 Mustangs at Alameda's piers in July 1950 for urgent transport to Korean airfields, underscoring the station's logistics role in reinforcing U.N. forces. Alameda's Naval Aviation Depot continued engine overhauls during the war, handling J-33, J-35, J-47, J-48, and J-57 jets alongside R-3350 and R-4360 reciprocating types, with a dedicated $3.2 million facility completing construction on June 1, 1953, just after the armistice. Carriers homeported at Alameda, including USS Ranger, Midway, Coral Sea, and Hancock, provided basing and maintenance support for squadrons conducting carrier operations off Korea. For the Vietnam War, NAS Alameda served as a primary homeport and maintenance hub for carriers conducting sustained air campaigns against and related targets. Ships such as , Hancock, , Midway, and Enterprise, all based at Alameda, departed for deployments starting in early 1965; for instance, left Alameda on March 3, 1965, for its first combat cruise, while maintained high-tempo operations from its Alameda homeport established in 1965. These carriers supported over 37,000 Seventh Fleet strike sorties by January 1966, with Alameda's O&R overhauling A-3 Skywarriors, A-4 Skyhawks, and A-1E Skyraiders, including a July 1965 emergency program delivering 226 R-3350 engine cylinders to the . Peak activity in 1967 logged 8.9 million direct labor hours, sustaining Carrier Air Groups CVG-2 and CVG-9, alongside anti-submarine units with P-3 Orions and later S-3 Vikings. Reserve squadron VA-304, established July 1, 1970, at Alameda with 12 A-7B Corsair IIs, provided additional attack capability for Vietnam deployments, while logistics wings like Fleet Logistics Air Wing Pacific, commissioned at the station in 1950, handled transport and sustainment. The depot's daily overhaul of attack aircraft and biennial servicing of patrol planes ensured continuous readiness amid escalating demands through 1975.

Infrastructure Expansion and Strategic Basing

Following , Naval Air Station Alameda expanded its infrastructure to accommodate jet aircraft and carrier operations amid emerging tensions. In 1945, the constructed a $1 million, 1.25-mile-long breakwater south of the carrier piers to protect the turning basin and improve berthing efficiency for large vessels. During the , a $24 million expansion program lengthened runways from 5,200 feet to 7,200 feet by November 1951, enabling support for heavier jet fighters and bombers deployed to Pacific theaters. A new 4-acre engine overhaul plant, costing $3.2 million, was completed on June 1, 1953, boosting the base's capacity to modernize 269 aircraft within six months of the war's outset. By the early 1960s, the installation grew to 2,720 acres, featuring three 8,000-foot runways, 2,027,000 square feet of shop space, and 2,858,000 square feet of covered storage to sustain Pacific Fleet aviation logistics. Pier infrastructure advanced in the 1970s: Pier 2 was lengthened and modernized in 1973 for larger ships, while Pier 3 underwent expansion in 1977, electrical system upgrades in 1981, and further enhancements in 1983 specifically to service nuclear-powered carriers such as the USS Enterprise. The Naval Aviation Repair Facility (NARF), redesignated in April 1967 from the prior Overhaul and Repair Department, encompassed 2.3 million square feet by the 1980s, overhauling 1,607 aircraft and 9,356 engines during the Vietnam War's initial years from 1967 to 1972. Strategically, Alameda's West Coast location offered secure basing for Pacific Fleet carriers, minimizing transit times to operational areas while leveraging industrial proximity for maintenance without exposing assets to overseas vulnerabilities. The base homeported four large aircraft carriers, including the from 1958 and USS Enterprise from 1966, alongside frequent berthings of others like the USS Hancock and USS Coral Sea, which launched strikes against starting in 1965. By the Vietnam era, it served as the homeport for half of the Navy's attack carrier force, enabling Carrier Division 3's initial strikes on July 3, 1950, and supporting over 37,000 combat sorties by 1966 through integrated training, overhaul, and logistics. This basing choice prioritized carrier striking , with the depot's jet overhaul expertise—pioneering programs like Progressive Aircraft Rework in the 1950s—ensuring fleet readiness across conflicts.

Facilities and Infrastructure

Airfields, Hangars, and Piers

The airfield at Naval Air Station Alameda, designated Nimitz Field in January 1967, encompassed over 348 acres in the western portion of the station, formed through dredging and operations that commenced in April 1941 and rendered the area operational by November 1942. Initially configured in a pattern resembling an "I" over "X" with five runways—two east-west, one north-south, and two diagonal—the layout supported early needs before modifications for larger . By the , expansions included 7-25 oriented east-west and 13-31 running southeast-northwest at 8,200 feet long and 400 feet wide, enabling jet operations following and seawall construction funded at $2,886,000. Runway lengths had previously been extended from 5,200 to 7,200 feet during a $24 million Korean War-era program completed by November 1951. Seaplane facilities complemented the land-based airfield, featuring a 3,000 by 1,585-foot lagoon completed by 1940 with four ramps—two on each side—and three additional ramps adjacent to a lighted seadrome for night operations. These supported squadrons such as VP-47 until its transfer in August 1960, after which operations shifted to maintenance uses. Landplane hangars, designated Buildings 20 through 24 (with Building 24 added in 1990), were arranged north-south parallel to the airfield by 1942, characterized by Moderne-style architecture including broad piers, horizontal bands, and steel sash windows. Seaplane hangars, Buildings 11, 12, 39, 40, 41, and 400 (the latter constructed in 1955 for electronics overhaul), formed an east-west array north of the lagoon, initially built by early 1940 to house up to 200 aircraft in what were then the world's largest hangars. Post-1960, seaplane hangars were repurposed for aircraft maintenance. Piers facilitated carrier and support vessel berthing, with Pier 1 constructed in 1939 for smaller craft and upgraded through 1988. Pier 2, built in 1941 for aircraft carriers and site of the 's departure for the in April 1942, was lengthened by 200 feet in the 1970s with utility enhancements including shore power in 1977. Pier 3, added in 1945 and expanded in the 1970s, received electrical upgrades in 1981 and 1983 to accommodate nuclear-powered Nimitz-class carriers, measuring 1,040 feet with concrete features like curbs and rail tracks; it now hosts the museum since December 1995. A 1.25-mile breakwater completed in 1945 mitigated silting around these structures. The Naval Aviation Depot (NADEP) at Naval Air Station Alameda, originally established as the Assembly and Repair (A&R) Department in , specialized in comprehensive overhaul, engine repair, and component to support operations. It began with the induction of an SOC-1 "Scouter" in January 1941, initially employing 200 personnel who repaired 14 per month by December , expanding to a peak workforce of 9,000 civilians during to overhaul over 24,000 across 53 types, including the F6F Hellcat, TBM Avenger, and PBY Catalina. By fiscal year 1945, the facility processed 842 complete overhauls and 2,027 engines, demonstrating its capacity for high-volume depot-level maintenance under wartime demands. Evolving through redesignations—Overhaul and Repair (O&R) in 1948, Naval Air Rework Facility (NARF) in 1967, and NADEP in 1987—the depot adapted to requirements, shifting focus to jet aircraft such as the A-3 Skywarrior, A-6 Intruder, EA-6B Prowler, P-3 Orion, and S-3 Viking, while supporting workloads comprising over 50% of operations by the late . It served as the sole overhaul site for T56 and TF34 engines and handled 21 engine types overall, including J-33 and J-57 models, with dedicated departments for aircraft overhaul, engine repair, accessories, , , radio-radar systems, and . The facility employed 237 specialized trades across foundries, machine shops, paint facilities, and custom manufacturing units capable of producing any required aircraft part, including plexiglas welding and engine stands, often salvaging millions in scrap value through innovative preservation techniques. NADEP Alameda's capabilities extended to progressive aircraft rework (PAR) and standard depot-level maintenance (SDLM) programs, enabling modifications like electronic warfare suite installations on P-3 aircraft and repairs on 12,000 component types totaling 80,000 units annually, with exclusive responsibility for 5,000 critical items. By the 1980s, occupying 2.3 million square feet over 138 acres with a workforce of around 4,800, it generated $375 million in annual business, managed 2,500 technical manuals, and deployed Voyage Repair Teams for at-sea carrier maintenance. Workload distribution typically allocated one-third to aircraft repair, one-tenth to engines, one-third to components, and one-twentieth to missiles, underscoring its role as a cornerstone of naval readiness from World War II through operations like Desert Shield and Desert Storm.

Closure and Transition

Base Realignment and Closure Process (1980s–1997)

In 1985, Secretary of Defense proposed closing 22 underutilizing bases, including the Naval Aviation Repair Facility (NARF) at Alameda, as part of cost-saving measures amid fiscal pressures; this spurred operational improvements that raised its efficiency ranking from sixth to second among peer facilities, ultimately sparing it from recommendation. The facility was redesignated the Naval Aviation Depot (NADEP) on April 8, 1987, expanding its depot-level maintenance responsibilities. By 1990, Secretary of Defense advocated shutting down all Navy installations to streamline operations post-Cold War; however, NADEP Alameda evaded closure in the 1991 BRAC round following evaluations of its strategic utility. Renewed scrutiny arose in the 1993 BRAC process, where the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission recommended NADEP closure on March 12, 1993, and full NAS Alameda closure on July 1, 1993, determining it held the lowest military value among Pacific Fleet air stations due to excess capacity, high operating costs relative to alternatives, and reduced aviation demands after the . The approved the NADEP closure recommendation on September 21, 1993, with enacting the overall BRAC list via joint resolution, mandating relocation of aviation squadrons, aircraft carrier homeporting (realigning ships to ports), personnel, equipment, and depot workloads primarily to NAS Lemoore and other optimized sites. The approved plan initiated a multi-year phaseout, prioritizing mission transfers, employee transitions, and environmental assessments while maintaining partial operations; this culminated in operational closure of NAS Alameda on April 30, 1997, after 57 years of service, marking the end of active aviation presence at the site.

Decommissioning and Initial Transfer

The U.S. decommissioned Naval Air Station Alameda on April 30, 1997, following the 1993 Commission's recommendation for closure due to excess capacity in support facilities. This operational closure concluded over 56 years of active service, involving the final relocation of approximately 2,800 personnel, aircraft squadrons, and carrier maintenance operations to other West Coast bases such as NAS and NAS San Diego. Post-decommissioning, the initiated property transfer under BRAC protocols, prioritizing environmental investigations and remediation to achieve Findings of Suitability to Transfer (FOST) for individual parcels. The City of , designated as the Local Redevelopment Authority via the Alameda Reuse and Redevelopment Authority (ARRA) established in , pursued no-cost economic development conveyances for job-creating reuse. Initial transfers commenced in the early with smaller, remediated parcels certified suitable for transfer, such as those for interim commercial or community uses, subject to institutional controls for residual contamination. By , protracted negotiations resolved disputes over cleanup liabilities, leading to a for no-cost transfer of the bulk remaining property—approximately 1,379 acres—directly to the , avoiding an initial $108 million federal valuation. This agreement facilitated the June 2013 handover of these lands, marking the primary initial conveyance and enabling subsequent redevelopment while the Navy retained oversight for ongoing remediation on non-transferred portions. As of that transfer, about 89% of the installation had been conveyed to local entities, with the remainder pending full environmental closure.

Post-Closure Redevelopment

Economic and Urban Planning Efforts

The City of Alameda established the Alameda Reuse and Redevelopment Authority (ARRA) in 1993 to oversee the transition of the former site, encompassing approximately 878 acres, into Alameda Point, with initial focus on economic recovery from the loss of thousands of military and civilian jobs upon the base's 1997 closure. The 1996 NAS Alameda Community Reuse Plan provided the foundational blueprint, prioritizing to restore employment through commercial, industrial, and research facilities while integrating residential and recreational elements to create a transit-oriented urban extension. Subsequent efforts, including the 2000 Alameda Point Revitalization Initiative (Measure B), advanced these goals by designating zones such as Preservation Mixed Use (AP-PMU), (AP-BP), and Commercial (AP-C), targeting up to 4,346 residential units (with 25% affordable), 3,182,000 square feet of commercial and space, 350,000 square feet of retail, and 600 slips to stimulate private investment and long-term revenue generation without straining city funds. emphasized pedestrian-friendly grids, 145 acres of parks and open spaces, waterfront promenades, and a new ferry terminal at Seaplane Lagoon to enhance connectivity to regional transit like , reducing vehicle dependency and supporting job-housing balance. The 2014 Town Center and Waterfront Precise Plan refined these strategies for a 150-acre core area, promoting compact, sustainable mixed-use districts including Residential Mixed Use (RMU) and Commercial Mixed Use (CMU) to accommodate up to 1,500 units, retail and spaces in existing 741,000 square feet of buildings, and employment-generating maritime and entertainment uses, all while incorporating flood protection against 24-inch via levees and elevated infrastructure. Economic objectives centered on catalyzing investment through diverse industries, with developer-funded public improvements up to $200 million, including sports complexes and Bay Trail extensions, to elevate the site's profile and foster fiscal self-sufficiency. Implementation has progressed unevenly, with a notable milestone in May 2018 when ground was broken on a $1 billion, 68-acre project delivering 800 apartments, townhomes, and condominiums, alongside ongoing commercial ventures in alternative energy and . However, delays exceeding a in some phases stem from protracted federal property conveyances, remediation requirements, and state laws enacted in 2020 that mandate production over commercial priorities in certain zones, constraining job-focused enterprise districts. As of 2024, city council study sessions addressed strategies for an Enterprise District at Alameda Point to prioritize employment through light industrial and business uses, reflecting persistent efforts to balance with economic viability amid environmental and regulatory hurdles.

Current Commercial and Residential Uses

Following its 1997 decommissioning, the former Naval Air Station Alameda, rebranded as Alameda Point, has undergone phased redevelopment emphasizing commercial job creation over extensive residential expansion, with approximately 1,379 acres allocated for mixed uses including retail, , and limited . The City of Alameda's Base Reuse and Economic Development Department oversees this process, prioritizing economic revitalization through of historic structures and new , such as backbone utilities completed in portions by July 2025. Commercial activities dominate, particularly in the Enterprise District designated for employment generation. Existing developments include restored facilities like Building 9 at 707 W. Tower Avenue, repurposed since the early 2010s for long-term job-creating businesses in sectors such as alternative energy, , beverages, and sports/fitness. Recent approvals support further expansion, including a 225,500-square-foot mixed-use building for and space approved in 2025. Building 92, acquired in September 2025 by a selected developer, will host 600,000 square feet of commercial alongside ancillary features like parks and a ferry terminal, fostering and tech-oriented enterprises. These initiatives align with the site's strategic location near the , supporting R&D in emerging fields like energy. Residential uses remain limited and targeted, often tied to supportive or to replace outdated naval-era structures. Former naval family housing units continue serving as transitional for approximately 200 clients as of August 2025, pending replacement under the RESHAP masterplan, which filed permits in October for initial phases including new . Market-rate residential development is advancing in the West Midway area, with plans approved by mid-2025 for 478 units in three- and four-story buildings across 12.4 acres, integrating with commercial elements to promote walkable mixed-use neighborhoods. While speculative proposals, such as a large-scale AI-focused "tech city" with 10,000 resident housing units, emerged in June 2025, they conflict with existing entitlements and have not advanced, underscoring the city's commitment to controlled, community-vetted growth.

Environmental Remediation

Historical Sources of Contamination

Naval Air Station (NAS) Alameda's operations from the 1930s through 1997 generated multiple sources of environmental contamination, primarily through industrial wastewater discharges, chemical usage in aircraft maintenance, fuel handling, and disposal of radioactive materials. These activities, tied to aviation repair, depot overhaul, and support functions, released solvents, heavy metals, fuels, and radionuclides into soil, groundwater, sediment, and surface water. Approximately 60 contaminated areas were identified, including 35 Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) sites and 25 petroleum sites. A primary source was the untreated discharge of all liquid industrial wastewaters into the 110-acre Seaplane Lagoon and Oakland Inner Harbor from 1936 to 1974, encompassing solvents, acids, paint strippers, degreasers, caustic cleaners, pesticides, chromium wastes, and cyanide wastes generated during base-wide operations. This practice contaminated lagoon sediments, posing risks to San Francisco Bay aquatic life and creating dense non-aqueous phase liquid (DNAPL) plumes, such as a 3-acre plume at Site 5 and a larger, deeper one at Site 4 from historical industrial releases. Aircraft maintenance and repair activities, particularly at facilities like Building 5, involved extensive use of volatile organic compounds such as (TCE) for degreasing metal parts, leading to leaks that contaminated and with concentrations reaching 2,200–13,000 micrograms per liter in Operable Unit 2B monitoring wells between 2016 and 2018. from processes and other operations further contributed to and . Fuel handling at piers, underground storage tanks, and gas stations resulted in spills and leaks, with historical records indicating significant petroleum hydrocarbon releases that required ongoing remediation since 1982. Radioactive contamination stemmed from the use of radium-226 in luminized paints for instrument dials starting in the late , with wastes disposed via storm drains at Buildings 5 and 400, as well as in 1 (1943–1956) and 2 (1952–1978), resulting in subsurface soil detections of 1.00–1.42 picocuries per gram. Firefighting training exercises employing aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) introduced per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) into groundwater, exacerbating plume migration toward adjacent estuaries. Additional wastes, including lubrication oils, hydraulic fluids, and from depot activities, were released through spills and improper storage, contributing to broader site-wide impacts.

Superfund Designation and Federal Responsibilities

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) added the former Naval Air Station (NAS) Alameda to the National Priorities List (NPL) under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), commonly known as Superfund, on July 22, 1999. This designation followed extensive environmental investigations identifying approximately 60 areas of contamination across the 2,806-acre site, including 35 Installation Restoration (IR) sites managed under the Navy's program. The NPL listing prioritized the site due to risks from hazardous substances such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and heavy metals, stemming primarily from untreated industrial wastewater discharges into Seaplane Lagoon and the Oakland Inner Harbor prior to 1974. As a federal facility, NAS Alameda's status imposes primary cleanup responsibilities on the Department of the under CERCLA Section 120, with the EPA serving as the lead regulatory agency for oversight and enforcement. The must conduct remedial investigations, feasibility studies, and response actions for all identified operable units, including sediment dredging in contaminated lagoons and soil remediation at IR sites. A Federal Facility Agreement, signed in 1999 by the , EPA, and the Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC), formalizes these obligations, ensuring coordination and compliance with state standards integrated via the state's Hazardous Substances Account Act. Federal liability extends to long-term operation and maintenance of remedies post-cleanup, funded through the Department of Defense's Environmental Restoration Account, with expenditures exceeding $539 million by 2020 for investigations and partial remediations. Despite property transfers to local entities under (BRAC) authority, the retains indefinite responsibility for environmental hazards, prohibiting reuse restrictions until remedies achieve unrestricted or meet institutional controls. This structure reflects CERCLA's emphasis on polluter accountability, holding the federal government liable as the historical operator without contribution from private parties absent evidence of third-party involvement.

Ongoing Cleanup Operations and Challenges (1997–2025)

Following the base's closure in 1997, the U.S. Navy initiated environmental restoration under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), addressing contaminants including volatile organic compounds (VOCs) like trichloroethylene (TCE), petroleum hydrocarbons, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), metals, and per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) across multiple Installation Restoration (IR) sites. Remediation efforts have included extraction and treatment, in-situ chemical oxidation, and permeable reactive barriers, with oversight from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), California Department of Toxic Substances Control, and the Restoration Advisory Board (RAB). By 2020, solvent plume remediation at Building 5—spanning decades of monitoring and treatment—achieved closure after reducing TCE concentrations below regulatory limits through pump-and-treat systems. Persistent challenges stem from dense non-aqueous phase liquids (DNAPLs) at IR Sites 4 and 5, where large, deep plumes (e.g., over 3 acres at Site 5) resist complete extraction due to their density and to , posing vapor intrusion and risks despite controlled exposure and migration. The 110-acre Seaplane Lagoon, contaminated by industrial wastes discharged from 1936 to 1974, requires ongoing sediment management to prevent PCBs and metals from bioaccumulating in the and migrating to . Emerging PFAS plumes, linked to aqueous film-forming foams used in , have delayed site transfers; remediation lags partly because manufacturers withheld data until 2023, complicating regulatory decisions. In response to PFAS migration toward the Oakland Estuary, the Navy deployed a colloidal (CAC) barrier in 2023–2024, achieving 99–100% reduction in plume mobility by July 2025, as verified in pilot studies, though destruction remains elusive and long-term monitoring continues. contamination at Building 530 prompted in-situ injection of in 2022 to oxidize hydrocarbons, targeting completion by 2025 amid flow complexities. Five-year reviews, such as the 2021 assessment of 22 IR sites across eight operable units, confirmed remedies protective but not fully implemented, with RAB meetings—most recently on September 4, 2025—highlighting needs for enhanced community input on wetlands restoration at Site 1 and radiological surveys in buildings. Overall, while human exposure and migration are controlled, construction remains incomplete sitewide, with full readiness for unrestricted use projected beyond 2025 due to plume persistence and adaptive strategies for recalcitrant contaminants.

Military and Economic Legacy

Strategic and Operational Achievements

Naval Air Station Alameda served as a critical , overhaul, and homeport facility for Pacific Fleet carrier operations from through the , enabling rapid aircraft turnaround and sustained projection across the Pacific theater. The station's Naval Aviation Depot (NADEP) specialized in aircraft and engine overhauls, achieving high-volume outputs that supported during major conflicts. During , following commissioning on November 1, 1940, NADEP Alameda overhauled and modified over 24,000 aircraft at an average rate of 17 per day, peaking in 1945 with 842 aircraft and 2,027 reciprocating engines processed. Personnel grew from 200 at commissioning to 1,935 by December 7, 1941, initially repairing 14 aircraft per month and scaling to one per day and 1.5 patrol aircraft every other day. The facility constructed the world's largest hangars and supported carrier operations, including preparations contributing to the USS Hornet's launch of the on April 18, 1942. In the , NADEP modernized 269 within six months starting in 1950 and completed the first and largest jet overhaul plant on the West Coast on June 1, 1953, at a cost of $3.2 million, shifting workload to J-33, J-35, J-47, J-48, and J-57 engines alongside reciprocating types. By 1958, annual production reached 1,305 jet engines and 881 reciprocating engines. For operations from 1965, Alameda homeported carriers including , Hancock, , and Enterprise, which conducted strikes against , while NADEP overhauled A-3, A-4, and A-1E and executed a 1965 crash program producing 226 R-3350 cylinders. The Naval Air Rework Facility (NARF) repaired approximately 200 annually, employing about 5,000 civilians, and maintained high operational tempo for homeported carriers like USS Coral Sea from 1965 onward. Additional innovations included the first overhaul of the I-16 in 1946 and application of phenolic resin coatings to engine parts. The base also hosted the largest transport seaplane, the , from 1944 to 1956.

Impacts on National Defense and Local Economy

Naval Air Station Alameda served as a critical hub for U.S. in the Pacific, facilitating the loading of B-25 Mitchell bombers onto for the on April 18, 1942, marking the first U.S. air strike on the Japanese homeland and boosting national morale during . The station's primary mission involved supplying aircraft and maintenance support to Pacific Fleet ships and carriers, enabling sustained operations against Japanese forces in the Pacific Theater. Its strategic location in positioned it as the Navy's aviation gateway to the Pacific, supporting training, repairs, and deployments that enhanced U.S. defensive capabilities against potential threats from the west. During the Cold War, NAS Alameda remained a vital asset, serving as homeport for multiple aircraft carriers including USS Enterprise (CVN-65), USS Coral Sea (CV-43), USS Ranger (CV-9), USS Hancock (CV-19), and USS Midway (CV-41), which projected U.S. power and deterred Soviet expansion in the Pacific. These carriers, along with aviation squadrons and logistics units, contributed to reconnaissance, training, and rapid response operations, bolstering national defense amid escalating tensions from the through the Vietnam era. The base's infrastructure, including extensive runways and repair facilities, ensured high operational readiness for fleet , directly supporting U.S. strategic deterrence. On the local economy, NAS Alameda was a major employer, peaking at approximately 18,000 military and civilian personnel during its operational years, which stimulated job creation in support industries such as , retail, and services in Alameda and surrounding areas. The influx of personnel and associated spending generated significant economic activity, with the base's presence correlating to a higher ratio of jobs per employed resident (0.95 in 1990) compared to post-closure levels. Its closure in 1997 resulted in the direct loss of these jobs, underscoring the station's role as an economic anchor that had sustained through defense-related expenditures and development.

References

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