Belvedere Lagoon

Coordinates: 37°52′37″N 122°28′03″W / 37.876871°N 122.467473°W / 37.876871; -122.467473
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Belvedere Lagoon
Belvedere Lagoon is located in California
Belvedere Lagoon
Belvedere Lagoon
LocationMarin County, California
Coordinates37°52′37″N 122°28′03″W / 37.876871°N 122.467473°W / 37.876871; -122.467473
TypeLagoon
Basin countriesUnited States
Surface area66 acres (27 ha)
Average depth5 ft (1.5 m)
Water volume330 acre⋅ft (410,000 m3)
Surface elevation0 m (0 ft) sea level
SettlementsBelvedere, California
ReferencesU.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Belvedere Lagoon

Belvedere Lagoon is an artificial lagoon on San Francisco Bay in Belvedere in Marin County, California. Narrow strips of land separate it from Richardson Bay (to the northwest) and Raccoon Strait.

The lagoon is owned and maintained by the Belvedere Lagoon Property Owners' Association. The lagoon is not accessible by boat from San Francisco Bay, and no public access is provided. Until somewhat late in the 20th century houseboats were present in Belvedere Lagoon.[1]

There used to be a natural passage between the lagoon and the San Francisco Bay through the southern spit.[2] The passage was spanned by a drawbridge.[3][2] From the late 19th century, the drawbridge would be raised twice a year, once in the spring to allow pleasure boats of the Corinthian Yacht Club to exit the lagoon, where the boats wintered, and go to their summer moorings, and once in the fall, to allow the boats to return.[4] This raising of the drawbridge signaled the beginning of the pleasure boat season.[3][5] In 1917, that informal celebration morphed into a more formal and elaborate parade of boats that has now evolved into the Opening Day on the Bay involving the 104 clubs of the Pacific Inter-Club Yacht Association.[5]

Belvedere Lagoon was partially filled after World War II to provide building sites for tract houses and to improve access to Belvedere Island. It was also once the site of a 9-hole golf course.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Russell Conder. 1992
  2. ^ a b "Belvedere – Island or Peninsula? - City at the End of the Rainbow  : City at the End of the Rainbow". www.fog-city.co. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  3. ^ a b "yachts emerge from lagoon". San Francisco Call. California Digital Newspaper Collection. 4 April 1904. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  4. ^ "the merry yachtsmen". Sausalito News. California Digital Newspaper Collection. 20 March 1897. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  5. ^ a b Nolte, Carl (April 21, 2017). "SF boat parade sails proudly into its 2nd century". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 25 April 2017.

Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]