The Conservancy at 40: San Mateo County Coast
The San Mateo County Coast is only minutes from one of the largest metropolitan areas in the state, and people making the short drive from San Francisco or San Jose are always surprised by how, all of a sudden, there’s so much green space on the coast! The open rolling hills look effortlessly “natural,” but decades of work and hundreds of millions of dollars have gone into protecting them.
In 1972, San Mateo County voters passed Measure R, creating the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District (Midpen) to “acquire and preserve a regional greenbelt of open space land in perpetuity, protect and restore the natural environment, and provide opportunities for ecologically sensitive public enjoyment and education.” Five years later, Midpen’s director identified the need for a nonprofit partner that could better work with local landowners and the Peninsula Open Space Trust (POST) was born.
Together with POST, Midpen, the County of San Mateo, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and others, the Conservancy has been part of a decades-long effort to preserve the farms, forests, creeks, vistas, and beaches of coastal San Mateo County. Over the Coastal Conservancy’s 40 years, we’ve invested more than $43 million to help purchase and protect more than 20 parcels along the San Mateo coast, ranging from small stretches of coastal bluffs at Pillar Point to the 4,262-acre Rancho Corral de Tierra, connecting Half Moon Bay to Montara. We’ve partnered with POST to save important coastal farms including the Bolsa Point Ranches, Cowell Ranch, Purisima Farms and San Gregorio Ranch.
TPL and the Conservancy worked together with the Pacifica Land Trust and the City of Pacifica to protect the 246-acre Pedro Point Headlands, with miles of dramatic trails that seem like a private preserve but which are, indeed, public. From the peaks of the property, you can view the entire Gulf of the Farralones from Point Reyes to the Farralon Islands. Pedro Point now forms the gateway to the Devils Slide Coast, an 8,900-acre network of publicly accessible lands located between Pacifica and Half Moon Bay. With the highway now safely tucked away under new tunnels, the Devil’s Slide segment of the CCT is an exhilarating mile of paved trail is accessible to everyone who is not in a car – from wheelchair-riders to horseback riders. They can thank San Mateo County Parks for operating the trail (and the Coastal Conservancy for funding the restrooms at either end of the trail!). Caltrans, the Coastal Commission, and especially the community’s “Tunnelistas” deserve many rounds of applause for creating this magnificent trail. The Devils Slide Coastal Trail opened in 2014 and attracts hundreds of visitors every day.
Latest News
- Job Posting: Project Support AnalystLove the North Coast, the San Francisco Bay Area, and the environment? This might be the job for you! The State Coastal Conservancy has two exciting opportunities for you to join us in protecting California’s iconic lands and waters, restoring vital habitats, and increasing inclusive and equitable enjoyment of the coast and shoreline. The Conservancy […] (Read more on Job Posting: Project...)
- Press Release: Coastal Conservancy Awards over $40 million for coastal access, restoration, and climate resilienceOakland, CA (4/18/2024) – Today, the Board of the State Coastal Conservancy approved grants totaling over $40 million for coastal access, restoration, and climate resilience. Among the grants awarded today are: A grant of up to $6,000,000 to Humboldt County Resource Conservation District to undertake the North Coast Wildfire Resilience Planning and Implementation Grant Program, which […] (Read more on Press Release: Coastal...)
- Sea Otter Recovery Grants RFP Now Open!The California State Coastal Conservancy announces the availability of grants to public agencies, tribes and nonprofit organizations for projects that facilitate the recovery of the southern sea otter along California’s coasts. The California Sea Otter Fund is one of the state’s tax check-off funds that allows taxpayers to voluntarily contribute to the recovery of California’s […] (Read more on Sea Otter Recovery...)