Founded 2026 · San Diego

Community Catalyst.
A Clean, Safe Park.

The Mission Bay Park Conservancy is a citizen-led initiative founded today to help San Diego deliver on the Mission Bay Park Master Plan. We are here to help our city and grow a cultural movement — steadily and together. Because we all care about the same thing: a clean, safe, well-loved park that works for every San Diegan. The best time is now. Join us to make a difference.

Recruiting board · 501(c)(3) incorporated · tax-exempt status pending

Our First Visible Project

Adopting the planned restroom closures.

The City's FY2027 Proposed Budget cuts service to 25 restrooms across the bay system: 13 Mission Bay restrooms closed seasonally (winter and summer), 5 Shoreline Parks restrooms closed in winter, and 7 portable restrooms eliminated at Fiesta Island entirely. We are stepping in — adopting and supporting the maintenance of these essential facilities so they stay open and clean for the public. Specific restroom locations will be announced by Parks & Recreation; the Conservancy is positioned to support each one as the list is published.

This is a concrete, immediate impact that will significantly improve the health and safety for all park goers. It is the start of a back-to-basics commitment that will define everything we do. We are addressing the bureaucracy — the red tape, the delays, the excuses that have kept this park from reaching its potential for decades.

With the City's support, we will help in every way possible — from raising funds for supplies so restrooms can remain open on peak days, to providing contract cleaning services where the City budget falls short. Much like Forever Balboa Park and the La Jolla Coast Conservancy, we will seek a partnership with the City — a permit to maintain where they cannot.

Public Trust

Held in trust. For the public. In perpetuity.

Mission Bay was conveyed to San Diego by the State of California in 1945 — not as land for sale or development, but in trust for four specific public purposes: navigation, fisheries, recreation, and visitor-serving uses. In 1962, San Diego permanently dedicated it as a public park.

1945

State tidelands conveyance — in trust for navigation, fisheries, recreation, and visitor-serving uses.

1962

San Diego Ordinance O-8628 — perpetual public-park dedication.

1987

Charter §55 (Proposition D) — voter-approved 25% commercial-use cap, public-supporting purposes only.

That trust is the frame. Every decision about Mission Bay — leases, restoration, public access, capital investment — must serve those public-trust purposes and the people they were dedicated to. It is not surplus land. It is not a site for housing. It is not a commercial portfolio. It is a public park, held for everyone, forever.

Vision 2035

Making temporary paradise permanent.

In 1974, planners Kevin Lynch and Donald Appleyard published Temporary Paradise? — a powerful call to protect San Diego's extraordinary landscape before it was lost. Fifty years later, that warning remains urgent. By 2035 we will have transformed Mission Bay into a world-class, climate-resilient, publicly-owned waterfront that delivers on the original promise of the founding vision — Central Park–level daily standards, constituent coordination and project amplification, and a unified voice that treats Mission Bay as one living system, not competing parts.

Read Vision 2035 →
2026
Conservancy launch · founding Board recruited · 501(c)(3) status secured
2027
Updated Master Plan draft · De Anza Natural construction begins
2028
Master Plan adopted by City · LCP certification advanced
2030
First major wetland restoration complete · endowment reaches $10M
2035
Mission Bay recognized as a national model of resilient urban parkland

The Mission Bay Park Conservancy is a citizen-led 501(c)(3) nonprofit founded in 2026. Tax-exempt status pending. We are actively recruiting a founding Board of Directors. Donations may be tax-deductible pending IRS determination. Read the launch press release →