When Ocean Beach Danced on the Sand
By Debbie Sklar / Times of San Diego / June 5, 2026
Back in the day, the sounds in Ocean Beach carried a little differently.
You might have been walking near the shoreline and heard it before you saw it — music drifting from wooden pavilions set directly on the sand, where people gathered to dance within sight and sound of the Pacific.
Surviving photographs from the early 20th century show more than one pavilion-style structure associated with beachfront recreation in the Ocean Beach area, including buildings identified as dancing pavilions and bathhouse facilities positioned near the shoreline.
These were not informal gatherings on open sand. They were designated structures built for recreation and public leisure at a time that Ocean Beach was emerging as one of San Diego’s growing coastal destinations.
Historical planning references and community records suggest the “New Ocean Beach Dancing Pavilion and Bath House” stood near the foot of Newport Avenue during the late 1910s. In addition to the primary pavilion structure, the beachfront area included related bathhouse and recreation buildings that formed part of an organized system of coastal leisure facilities.
Over time, the main pavilion was repurposed as a skating rink before eventually disappearing as shoreline development and land use patterns changed.

By Margot Sheehan /
The San Diego Community Coalition publishes this email bulletin to keep our members and the general San Diego public informed about important Council and Planning Commission hearings and other city public meetings.
Developer HomeFed’s 3,000+ Project Halted After Its Appeal Denied
By Steve Rodriguez
By Katherine Clements /
By Sam Halpern

Reporter David Garrick at the
By Dave Maass / 
by Scott Hopkins / 




Recent Comments