South San Francisco Bay Shoreline Study

Source

Authors

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Published

2015

Description

The South San Francisco Bay Shoreline Project is a Congressionally authorized study by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers together with the Santa Clara Valley Water District and the State Coastal Conservancy to identify and recommend flood risk management and ecosystem restoration projects along South San Francisco Bay for Federal funding. Santa Clara County’s shoreline is at risk from coastal flooding now, due to extreme storm events combined with high tides, and in the future as sea levels rise. The County is among those areas in California at risk for the highest potential damages from flooding (See California's Flood Future). The South San Francisco Bay Shoreline Project (Shoreline Project) is looking at the feasibility of options for managing flood risk along the South Bay shoreline as well as undertaking ecosystem restoration and expanding public access. The goal of the Shoreline Project is to protect the parts of Santa Clara County’s shoreline with the highest potential damages and threats to human health and safety from flooding, using a combination of flood protection levees and wetlands. This approach using natural infrastructure would provide increased flood protection and restored Bay habitats, as well as a flood protection system that can evolve in the future.

Climate Impact Tags

Flooding

Adaptation Planning Guide Phases

Phase 3: Define Adaptation Framework and Strategies Phase 4: Implement, Monitor, Evaluate, and Adjust

Resource Type Tags

Assessment Plan or strategy

Topics

Extent: Santa Clara County

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Last updated: July 21, 2025