| The Point Molate team is committed
to its vision of harmonious co-existence with local ecosystems
and the communities that surround the Project. Our vision
brings together two complementary approaches to environmental
design. On the one hand, the Project will integrate the best
green technologies, materials, and planning as a way of reducing
pollution and consumption of resources. On the other hand,
the Project will engage people on site and around the region
to restore and continually improve healthy ecosystems, including
the neighboring communities in Richmond.
Green Design
This "super-green" project aims to go beyond
any other regional development effort in reducing its ecological
footprint while generating enduring ecological benefits.
It brings together regenerative philosophy, technologies,
and design from the beginning, yielding conservation benefits
that extend well beyond the Site and into the future. Thirty-nine
percent of US energy demand is used to heat, cool, and light
buildings—a situation that California and the Bay Area
have set out to provide leadership in changing. The Project
will be a significant example of what business can do to lead
the fight against global warming and resource depletion. Initial
estimates are that it is possible to reduce on-site energy
use by 35 to 50 percent. Examples of some of the technologies
and programs included in the current proposal:
- On-site renewable energy and co-generation
- Advanced lighting design including daylighting
- Recycled gray water system
- Storm-water capture
- Passive cooling and heating
- Energy-efficient key card smart building system
- Recycling and food waste composting
Green technologies and design will be integrated into every
phase of the Project:
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Pedestrian- and Transit-Oriented
Development
For residents, employees, and visitors, Point Molate
is designed to reduce the need to drive. Point Molate is being
designed as a major intermodal transit node. Regular ferry
service to and from San Francisco and points around the Bay
will be established from the on-site pier—and the project
team is working with local companies to pursue alternative
fuel ferries. Point Molate has also initiated collaborations
with BART and AC Transit to provide convenient shuttle service
from BART, as well as an improved and extended bus schedule
to the Site and within Richmond. We project the use of mass
transit to access the Site will exceed that of any comparable
project. Although parking will be provided on site for buses
and those who choose to drive, cars will be kept outside of
the village center to encourage pedestrians. Electric carts
will be available for visitors who require them.
Restoring an Endangered Landscape
For millennia, Native American management practices helped
create and sustain the rich ecosystems found here when Europeans
first arrived. Since that time, these ecosystems have been
severely disturbed and damaged by humans. Point Molate still
holds tiny fragments of coastal prairie, an ecosystem that
is threatened throughout California.
Currently, Point Molate is a “Brownfield”—an
industrialized, infill site with degraded natural systems.
Through three years of negotiations with the U.S. Navy, the
project team has been able to secure agreements to significantly
speed up, and enhance the process for environmental cleanup
on site. This effort involved convincing the Navy to fund
more cleanup than they would normally perform themselves,
and a multi-million dollar funding commitment from the Project
to provide for the aggressive cleanup the community deserves.
As part of its green mission, the Point Molate team
will work with environmental groups, neighbors, and tribal
people to develop a plan to restore and extend native habitat
on site and in the region. This is a key part of
the Project’s work to regenerate indigenous culture
and to resurrect native practices that helped keep the land
and water healthy.
Sense of Place
People have a disproportionate influence over whether or not
an ecosystem is healthy. In the Bay Area’s distant past,
people played a beneficial role. But during the last 150 years,
human activities have brought many of the region’s plants
and animals to the brink of extinction, degrading the health
of land and sea in the process.
Excellent work is being done in the region to reverse these
trends. Much knowledge and sophisticated technology has been
developed. But the real key to changing patterns of behavior
is to awaken people’s understanding and sense of caring
about the place they live.
Point Molate seeks to be a living and learning community,
actively sharing its insights about what works. The Project’s
pioneering use of environmental technologies will be showcased
through informational, scientific, and educational exhibits.
While most visitors will come to Point Molate for fun, entertainment,
food and recreation, our ambition is to awaken in each a deeper
sense of belonging to, and responsibility for, this rare and
beautiful place called the Bay Area. |