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After A’s plan falls apart, a new twist changes everything for the future of Oakland’s waterfront

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After A’s plan falls apart, a new twist changes everything for the future of Oakland’s waterfront

OAKLAND — Departing sports teams and frustrating politics haven’t detracted from the elegance of Oakland’s waterfront — a gleaming reminder that, despite its troubles, the city and its bustling port remain a cultural and economic cornerstone of the Bay Area.

But for years, Oakland has struggled to establish a large-scale vision to place the waterfront — with its nightlife hub at Jack London Square and the industrial harbor a short walk away — at center stage in the city’s attractions.

“People see an incredible amount of potential in the neighborhood,” said Savlan Hauser, executive director of the Jack London Square Improvement District. “It’s not so much about needing to change it, but (rather) about realizing the full vision of a waterfront neighborhood.”

In a recent court settlement, a major Bay Area regulatory agency quietly reversed a key decision that would’ve helped transform a sizable port property, Howard Terminal, into a 35,000-seat ballpark and thousands of waterfront homes.

The reversal was a major victory for the port’s shipping industries, which have long opposed housing on the land south of the railroad tracks along Embarcadero West.

The development at Howard Terminal, proposed by the soon-to-depart A’s, has long since fallen apart. Any new plans at the port would need to start from scratch, likely encountering legal, regulatory and environmental hurdles.

So where does the Oakland waterfront go from here?

In a lengthy report unveiled this spring outlining Oakland’s plans for downtown, the waterfront and Jack London Square feature heavily for their various existing offerings: restaurants, bars, historic monuments, a hotel, a bowling alley and a terminal that sends ferries to San Francisco.

But the same plan notes that areas to the west of Jack London Square — including Howard Terminal, the site of the doomed A’s redevelopment — will be “maintained for industrial uses.”

Business owners around the waterfront say the commercial district is mostly faring well but could use a significant boost in foot traffic, given that it is cut off from downtown Oakland by I-880.

Hauser, of the improvement district, was among those excited to see the A’s potentially build the massive ballpark-and-housing development at Howard Terminal, which encompasses 55 acres of port land currently used as a staging area for shipping containers and trucks at the busy industrial harbor.

Howard Terminal is seen in this drone view over Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2018. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

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