Greenbelt Alliance
- San Francisco, California, USA
Greenbelt Alliance is a San Francisco Bay Area non-profit activist organization that campaigns for the preservation of open spaces within urban areas, primarily San Francisco's greenbelt[1].
History
Greenbelt Alliance was founded in 1958 as an organization called Citizens for Regional Recreation and Parks. One of its first campaigns was helping to halt the filling of San Francisco Bay for development. In 1969, the organization was renamed People for Open Space to reflect the organization's additional interest in preserving ranch lands, agricultural lands, and wildlife preserves. In the 1970s, People for Open Space helped to establish a public park district called the Mid-Peninsula Regional Open Space District (1972), as well as Suisun Marsh (1974). The organization was also involved in campaigning for a regional government for the Bay Area, but lost in Sacramento by one vote. In 1976, People for Open Space added the goal of establishing a permanent regional greenbelt to its agenda, and in 1984 created a group called Greenbelt Congress to work on open space protection through activism and grassroots organizing.
In 1987, Greenbelt Congress and People for Open Space merged to become Greenbelt Alliance, and established a dual focus of grassroots activism and policy research. Greenbelt Alliance expanded outside San Francisco with a field office in the South Bay in 1988. In 1995, East Bay and Sonoma-Marin field offices opened, and in 2001, a Solano-Napa office opened in response to growth along the Interstate 80 corridor between San Francisco and Sacramento.
In the 1990s and 2000s, Greenbelt Alliance was involved in stopping sprawl development proposals and protecting Pleasanton Ridge (1993), Bear Creek Redwoods (1999),[2] and Cowell Ranch/John Marsh SHP (2002)[3] as state parks or open space preserves. It helped to create the Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority in 1994, and was part of defeating a freeway proposal called the Mid-State Toll Road in 1995.
See also
- Climate resilience
- Greenbelt
- Land use
- Mixed-use development
- New Urbanism
- Transit-oriented development
- Urban planning
- Urban sprawl
- Walkability
References
External links
- Resilience Playbook
- v
- t
- e
- Major
- San Francisco Bay
- Suisun Bay
- San Pablo Bay
- Minor
- Golden Gate
- Grizzly Bay
- Richardson Bay
- San Rafael Bay
- Richmond Inner Harbor
- San Leandro Bay
- Former
- Yerba Buena Cove
- Mission Bay
- Rivers
- San Joaquin
- Sacramento
- Napa
- Guadalupe
- Petaluma
- Creeks (discharging into the Bay)
- Alameda
- Baxter
- Cerrito
- Codornices
- Coyote (Santa Clara)
- Coyote (Marin)
- San Leandro
- San Lorenzo
- Schoolhouse
- Temescal
- Sausal
- Redwood
- San Mateo
- Sonoma
- Corte Madera
- Arroyo Corte Madera del Presidio
- San Rafael
- Miller
- Novato
- Tolay
- San Francisquito
- Pacheco
- Alhambra
- Adobe
- Rodeo
- Refugio
- Pinole
- Garrity
- Rheem
- Karlson
- San Pablo
- Castro
- Wildcat
- Fluvius Innominatus
- Marin (Alameda County)
- Strawberry
- Easton
- Mission Creek
- Reservoirs
- Calaveras Reservoir
- Lafayette Reservoir
- Straits and estuaries
- Clifton Court Forebay
- Carquinez Strait
- Oakland Estuary
- Raccoon Strait
- Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta
- Stockton Deepwater Shipping Channel
- Watersheds
- Laguna Creek Watershed
- Guadalupe watershed
protected areas
- Don Edwards National Wildlife Refuge
- San Pablo Bay National Wildlife Refuge
- Eden Landing Ecological Reserve
- Hayward Regional Shoreline
- Hayward Shoreline Interpretive Center
- Crown Memorial State Beach
- McLaughlin Eastshore State Park
- Emeryville Crescent State Marine Reserve
- Point Isabel Regional Shoreline
- César Chávez Park
- Brooks Island Regional Preserve
- Point Pinole Regional Shoreline
- Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge
- Coyote Point Recreation Area
- Middle Harbor Shoreline Park
- National Estuarine Research Reserve
- China Camp State Park
- San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park
- SF Bay Trail
- Oyster Bay Regional Shoreline
- Big Break Regional Shoreline
- Palo Alto Baylands Nature Preserve
peninsulas
- Major islands
- Alameda
- Alcatraz
- Angel
- Treasure Island
- Yerba Buena
- Minor
- Brooks
- Bair
- Bay Farm
- Belvedere
- Brother
- Castro Rocks
- Coast Guard
- Greco
- Hooks Island
- Mare
- Red Rock
- The Sisters
- Marin Islands
- Roe
- Ryer
- Seal Islands
- Peninsulas/infill
- Albany Bulb
- Brisbane Baylands
- Point Isabel
- Foster City
- Fleming Point
- Hunters Point
- Sierra Point
- Steamboat Point
and tubes
marinas
- History
- Delta and Dawn
- Discovery Site
- Humphrey the Whale
- San Leandro Oyster Beds
- Richmond Shipyards
- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Bay Model
- Harold Gilliam
- Marincello
- Ecology
- Golden Gate Biosphere Reserve
- Cosco Busan oil spill
- Thicktail chub
- Delta smelt
- Conservation and Development Commission
- The Watershed Project
- Save The Bay
- Citizens for East Shore Parks
- Friends of Five Creeks
- Urban Creeks Council
- 1971 oil spill
- Greenbelt Alliance
- The Bay Institute
- Reber Plan
- San Francisco Baykeeper
- San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
- Estuary Partnership
- Transportation
- Water Trail
- Transportation in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Portal
- Category