‘The Estimate to Build the Preferred Design for a New Ocean Beach Pier Is Out of Whack’
Price Tag Probably Not Based on Standard ‘Design-Build’ Contracting Method
By Geoff Page
The City of San Diego held its fourth OB Pier Renewal Community Workshop, Saturday April 6, during which the public got a look at the design for the new pier. The event was very well attended — perhaps as many as 200 people came to the Liberty Station Conference Center for the workshop.
The public also got a look at the new estimate to build the new pier based on the current design. $175 – $200 million.
My first reaction was that it took less than that to build two highway bridges over the San Diego River. That price tag was $150 million, for two bridges, a far more complicated project. This estimate to build the pier makes it more or less, impractical. Unless the design is changed.

Locals are bearing the cost of increasing rates, with many spending more than half of their income on rent
The Biden administration should be preparing for the worst.

The city of San Diego unveiled what a new Ocean Beach Pier might look like. These 3 renderings were put together based on feedback from the public on three preliminary design concepts that were first revealed in September.
In Southern California during today’ total solar eclipse, we’ll see a less dramatic blockage of the sun with about 50 percent totality as the moon slips between the sun and Earth.
Of all the decisions that the San Diego City Council has made of late, none have suffered the derision and mockery that the go-ahead to spend $4 to $5 million for a consultant to study how much the city should charge for trash pick-up has.
Herbert Shore was a founding member of DSA in 1982 and San Diego chapter until he passed in February of 2024
B
y The San Diego
Our friend Roger Showley (PLHS 1966] just had some ideas of how San Diego could handle the “chase [of] the mirage of a new City Hall” that was published in the U-T Letters to the Editor:
Despite incentives from the City, developers are opting to build units for higher income tenants.




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