
Aerial view of the port of Oakland
'The Port of Oakland' was the first major port on the
Pacific Coast of the United States to build terminals for
container ships. It is now the fourth busiest container port in the United States; behind
Long Beach,
Los Angeles, and
Newark. Development of an
intermodal container handling system in 2002 culminated over a decade of planning and construction to produce a high volume
cargo facility that positions the Port of Oakland for further expansion of
West Coast freight
market share.
Early history
Originally, the estuary, 500 feet wide, had a depth of two feet at mean low tide. In
1852, the year of
Oakland's incorporation as a town by the
California State Legislature, large shipping
wharves were constructed along the
Oakland Estuary, which was dredged to create a viable shipping channel. 22 years later, in
1874, the previously dredged shipping channel was deepened to make Oakland a deep water port. The project in 1921 dug a channel thirty feet deep at mean low water from the bay to Brooklyn Basin, a distance of four and three quarters miles, and then a channel twenty-five feet deep around the basin and eighteen feet to
San Leandro Bay, an added distance of four miles. However, the port was not officially named the Port of Oakland until 1927, under the leadership of the newly-organized Board of Port Commissioners.
Under the
Rivers and Harbors Act of 1922, the project produced the channel thirty feet deep and eight hundred feet wide through the shoal south of Yerba Buena Island narrowing to six hundred feet at the end of the Oakland
jetties, widening of the estuary channel to six hundred feet to Webster Street, dredging of the south channel basin to thirty feet and a
turning basin, then thirty feet to Park street, at a cost to the federal government of six million dollars
In
1962, the Port of Oakland began to admit container ships. Container traffic greatly increased the amount of cargo loaded and unloaded in the Port; by the late
1960s, the Port of Oakland was the second largest port in the world in container tonnage. However, depth and navigation restrictions in
San Francisco Bay limited its capacity, and by the late 1970s it had been supplanted by the Ports of
Los Angeles and
Long Beach as the major container port on the West Coast.
Recent history
One of the main limitations to growth was the inability to transfer containers to rail lines, all
cranes historically operating between
ocean vessels and
trucks. In the 1980s the Port of Oakland began the evaluation of development of an
intermodal container transfer capability, i.e. facilities that would allow trans-loading of containers from vessels to either trucks or rail modes. The Port retained VZM, Korve Engineering and Earth Metrics to perform engineering and
environmental studies to allow detailed engineering to proceed.
[1] In
1987, on behalf of the Oakland port Commission,
Allen Broussard led a group of 72 lawyers and city officials on a 3-week long trip to
China meeting the Mayor of
Shanghai,
Jiang Zemin (Shanghai is twinned with
San Francisco)
[2]
Completion of the resulting rail intermodal facility occurred in 2002. That brought the cumulative investment of port expansion to over 1.4 billion dollars since 1962, half of which was comprised by the intermodal facility. In the early 2000s, the new intermodal rail facility along with severe congestion at the
Ports of Los Angeles and
Long Beach caused some trans-Pacific shippers to move some of their traffic to the Port of Oakland (especially if the final destination is not in
Southern California but lies farther east). Also, the Port is now reaping the benefits of investment in post-
panamax cranes,
dredging, and the transfer of
military property, which has now been used for expansion.
[3]
Oakland International Airport
''see main article: '
Oakland International Airport'
In addition to its maritime activities, the Port also operates
Oakland International Airport.
See also
★
List of ports in the United States
★
Port of Redwood City
References
1. ''Initial Study: Intermodal Interface Demonstration Project, Port of Oakland, Oakland, California'', Earth Metrics and Korve Engineerning, December 20, 1989
2. In Memoriam: Honorable Allen E. Broussard (1929 – 1996)
3. Port of Oakland Official Site: Facts and Figures (2006)
External links
★
Port of Oakland Official website