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God-Forsaken Richmond September 19, 2009 |
GOD-FORSAKEN RICHMOND
By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor __________________________________________________________
From the September 10, 2009 UnderCurrents column of the Berkeley Daily Planet newspaper
The Berkeley Daily Planet is available online at http://www.berkeleydailyplanet UnderCurrents is archived at http://www.safero.org/undercurrents.html __________________________________________________________
It is easy to see why my grandmother felt that way. Richmond in the
1930's was still a decade away from the enormous population explosion of
the war years, must have appeared as a backwater West Texas town set
down on the bleakest and most blustery point of the East Bay shoreline,
the damp Pacific winds sweeping over the drainageways and marshlands
like the desolation of the English moors, the flat bay plains far from
the cool shade-green of the eastern foothills, the smoke from the many
refineries sending hellish plumes of smoke out over the
constantly-overcast skies. For a woman born and raised in the roaring,
bustling nineteenth century San Francisco, Depression-era Richmond must,
indeed, have been a depressing scene to Grandma Reid.
But nature is nothing if not perpetually in balance. As the old folks
say, the same thing make you laugh, make you cry. The same weather
patterns that created Richmond's bleak and windswept flatlands also gave
it some of the most spectacular bayfront views of the east or west bay.
And these days, the Contra Costa city is seeking to capitalize on its
extensive shoreline to lead the city into an economic and social
revival.
First and foremost on that revival agenda has been what is now called
the Ford Point Building, the half a million square foot behemoth that
was once the old Richmond Ford Assembly Building, and was later used to
build military vehicles during World War II. The enormous building
closed for industrial use more than half a century ago, and was severely
rocked and damaged by Loma Prieta. Because of that, the City of Richmond
came close to either demolishing or gutting the structure, as well as
considered proposals that would have turned it-or its property-into a
standard office park or-sigh-condominium housing.
The city did none of those, instead opting to move forward with a
historic preservation project that kept the building intact and centered
its uses around a convention center and the housing of green businesses.
A waterfront-view restaurant has its tables set intertwined with the
original boilers and piping that once served the auto assembly plant,
but the real gem of the building is the convention space. Called the
Craneway, the huge convention hall preserves the auto plant's old glass
pane west wall that opens up onto the bay, giving a convention-goers an
unrestricted view of islands and bridges and deep water stretching over
to the San Francisco shoreline. In one interesting innovation, the
center's developers use tables irregularly sliced from unfinished trees,
the knot-patterns clearly visible on the surface, so that each
individual table has its own pattern.
At night, the old assembly plant smokestack that once belched pollutants
into the Richmond air is now a proud monument illuminated by colored
lights that can be seen far out on the bay waters, the appropriate
symbol of Richmond rising.
In 2008, the city's renovation and preservation work on the old Ford
Building won it a national award from the National Trust For Historic
Preservation.
But Richmond's revival has not been limited to its 32 miles of
shoreline. Quite the contrary. For years Richmond City Hall was relocated to not far from the Ford Building while its old downtown headquarters was being renovated, and for a while there was some talk in city circles about the seat of city government remaining permanently down near the waterfront. Instead, City Hall has moved back to MacDonald Avenue, part of a general rehabilitation effort along the city's main downtown street. In fact, someone who-like myself-had not driven in downtown Richmond for a couple of years would hardly recognize MacDonald these days. The city has done major work along the street, tearing down many buildings and renovating others, as well as restriping and reconfiguring the street surface itself. The lower end, where the old blues and jazz clubs used to rock during the World War II glory years, catering to thousands of sailors and shipyard workers, is being primed as Richmond's historic district.
But that is not surprising, as Richmond has learned that part of the way
to ensure its future is by trading in on its past. Three years ago, I
reported on how members of the Iron Triangle Players-a group of Richmond
youth working out of the city's East Bay Center For The Performing
Arts-put together a presentation of a video and live monologue sketches
called "Memories Of MacDonald."
"The monologue sketches and video presentation" I wrote in a Daily
Planet article, "were part of, Memories of Macdonald, a six-month
project sponsored by several Richmond-based agencies and organizations
which are in the midst of a six month-long project to reclaim the city's
past. The groups have been collecting oral and visual history of the
city's once-bustling main drive, using a corps of local youth volunteers
to help do the gathering. ? The project will culminate with a series of
historical markers to be placed along Macdonald. The markers will
contain historical photographs and quotes from residents who lived
through Macdonald's glory times, and will be similar to the
widely-acclaimed markers along the city's waterfront."
The grandmother of Richmond's development-through-history effort, of
course, is the Rosie The Riveter World War II Homefront National
Historical Park, the Richmond-based national park that centers around
preserving the history of the World War II Kaiser shipyards. This is a
unique national park, based not upon a specific set-aside land acreage,
but upon historical sites of homefront support-the-war activities
scattered around Richmond. The old shipyard sites are still there and
some major artifacts-like the Ford Building that manufactured tanks, the
enormous Whirlycrane that was used to move steel slabs from dock to
building ships, and the World War II era ship the Red Oak Victory-are
available for visitors and easily identifiable as monuments from the
world's last major war. But other historical sites-housing projects
where shipyard workers lived or buildings that housed USO recreation
sites for military personnel-are identifiable only by reference in park
documents and bus tours or by newly-erected park signage. Bus tours of
these sites long-ago became so popular that the Rosie The Riveter Park
stopped advertising them because they could not handle the crowds, and
the waiting list to get on the tours still remains long.
Locally, practically the only media attention Richmond gets is when one
its young residents shoots at another one. Within the Bay Area, the city
suffers from a reputation of violence. But in large part because of the
publicity generated by the national park site, the city's national
reputation may be slowly changing, with potential visitors seeing it as
a convention destination of breathtaking waterfront views, a
less-expensive spot within quick traveling distance of the San Francisco
tourist magnets, the Marin County shoreline, and the California wine
country. As that national vision grows, Richmond's nagging violence will
become less of a factor in keeping tourist dollars away. After all,
there are few countries in the world not involved in actual warfare that
are more violent than Jamaica, or cities in the country more violent
than New Orleans, yet tourists pack those destinations month after
month, year after year.
That violence must be reduced and the reasons for it solved, of course,
but part of that will be helped-to some degree-by bringing more jobs and
activities into a city that is somewhat short of both, particularly for
its dark-skinned youth population. And Richmond's reputation will only be enhanced once the city decides to do with the old Winehaven winery property at Pt. Molate. City officials and residents are still divided over plans to turn the winery into a casino, or to restore the winery and preserve the area as open space. It's one of those decisions that any city would envy. The old Winehaven building is a castle-like structure that is still intact, and, when restored, will be even more spectacular than the Ford Building. In addition, situated on a wooded bluff just at the side of the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge toll plaza, the property's views are more breathtaking than the waterfront on which the Ford Building sits. Either way the city decides, by continuing to keep so much of its waterfront available for public use and enjoyment, Richmond will prosper.
Meanwhile, it has to be noted that nearby Oakland had the chance to cash
in on the Rosie phenomenon, but has ignored the opportunity. My cousin
Betty Reid Soskin-a U.S. Parks Ranger based at the Rosie The Riveter
Park-has sought for several years to interest Oakland politicians in
expanding the park sites into that city. None of them-and I emphasize
none-have taken up the opportunity which seems odd, since Oakland
could benefit from a better national reputation as well. But maybe
Oakland leaders think that Richmond, being such a God-forsaken place,
could not possibly generate ideas from which Oakland could benefit. |