About
Read YES! Magazine
YES! Articles
by Topic

Get Active
For Teachers
& Students

Speakers Bureau
YES! Store
get YES!
•  FREE Trial Issue
•  subscribe SPECIAL
•  donate
•  gift subscriptions
•  order back issues
•  email newsletter
summer 1999 issue
•  table of contents
•  Diverse, Green, Beautiful Cities: an interview with Carl Anthony
•  Dreams: The Making of Cities
•  Stopping the Big Boxes
•  When The Only Tool You Have Is a Hammer
related links
•  other articles by author
Summer 1999: Cities of Exuberance
Bringing Streams To Light
by Mark Overbay
Print this articleEmail this article to a friend
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

 In cities all over the world, engineers have channelized, straightened, or buried free-flowing creeks to maximize space for buildings and streets. A number of communities in the San Francisco Bay area have taken steps to do the opposite; they are opening up, or “daylighting,” portions of the area's 35-mile creek system.

Several of the creeks were restored primarily by teams of shovel and pick-wielding volunteers. Other streams, such as the Codornices Creek, required the work of a crack construction team outfitted with heavy equipment.

Once workers open up a portion of a creek and replant exposed areas with native vegetation, most of the aquatic insects return on their own, attracting birds, amphibians, and snakes, all the way up the food chain.

Biodiversity is enriched, as are nearby residents. The  day-lighted waterflows bring nature and agriculture back into balance with human beings and their urban habitats.

Richard Register, director of Ecocity Builders and a pioneer of Bay Area creek restoration, advises anyone interested in restoring a stream to start with a “creek stenciling” program. Volunteers use brightly painted shapes of creek-dwelling animals and insects as markers to indicate underground creek locations. Once the organizers establish a sufficient amount of community awareness and support, they begin work on the stream itself.

The size and scope of restoration projects can vary greatly. If a creek is buried, daylighting it can be as simple as digging away the coverage, but if the creek has been channeled or diverted, restorers must search historic records and check topographical maps to find the stream's original path.

– MARK OVERBAY

Contact: Urban Ecology, 405 14th Street, Suite 900, Oakland, CA 94612, tel: 510/251-6330, fax: 510/251-2117 or Bay Area Citizens for Creek Restoration, c/o Aquatic Outreach Institute, 1327 South 46th Street, #155 Richmond Field Station, Richmond, CA 94804; tel: 510/236-9558

Risk Free Trial Subscription


current cover

Sign up for a free trial issue to try out our award-winning, ad-free, independent magazine of positive change.

 
Try YES! Magazine Free!
First Name City
Last Name State
Address Zip
E-mail (required)
Email Newsletters
YES! News
Education News

If you like it and decide to continue, you'll pay just $19.00 for 4 more issues (5 in all), a 42% savings off the newsstand price! Otherwise, simply write "cancel" on the invoice.
This offer valid for U.S. addresses only. For International, click here