The
Doubletree Hotel: A New Option for a
June 9 2005
One possible obstacle to the
implementation of
The solution proposed
here is to use more of the existing infrastructure within the marina, in
particular part of the dock area now used by Hornblower Cruises and Events at
the Berkeley Marina Doubletree Hotel. Hornblower currently operates several
vessels from this dock that are significantly larger than the 149-passenger
size contemplated for this route. There appears to be ample room to add a ferry
berth without seriously affecting Hornblower's operation (as shown in the photoshopped aerial view).
From an operations point
of view this location may not be as advantageous as a new terminal and
breakwater system outside the marina. There is a time and distance penalty associated
with a terminal inside the marina, but for the Doubletree location this penalty
is not nearly as severe as it has been at the existing old ferry pier in the
south-east corner of the marina basin. The Doubletree site probably adds 4-5
minutes to each trip, increasing the speed requirement to about 21-22 knots in
order to maintain an hourly schedule with one vessel. This is not as
energy-efficient as the shorter and faster route from the Municipal Fishing
Pier or nearby shoreline, but WTA appears intent on procuring vessels with a
service speed of 25 knots regardless.
The old ferry pier added an
average of 8-10 minutes of time in each direction. (During the WTA demo ride
last year, the "Bay Breeze" required 8 minutes to leave the harbor
and 14 minutes to enter the harbor and secure to the pier).
The first aerial photo
shows the 330-passenger Peralta and its berth near
Compare the water-side access
to this proposed ferry berth to the old ferry pier at the lower right corner of
the view.
The major advantage of
the Doubletree location is that it requires no dredging, no breakwater
construction and minimal facilities development in order to begin service. All
that's needed is a wider boarding float and gangways, a ticket machine and a
rain shelter, which can be located either in a nearby parking area or on the
float itself. The #9 bus stop is not precisely at the proposed site, as it is
with the Fishing Pier, but close enough for a slight diversion of the route to
serve the ferry effectively.
There appears to be more
than enough room for both side-tie and bow-in docking, consistent with the
proposed new WTA terminal standards.
The parking resource is
about the same as at the Municipal Fishing Pier / H's Lordships location. There
are more spaces available, especially considering the gravel overflow area on
the east side of
At Doubletree, there is
also the possibility of developing new parking to serve the heavy demand for
There are several clear
benefits of the Doubletree ferry terminal location to the Berkeley Marina and
to the City: The most immediate is the shorter timeline - with virtually no
terminal to construct, and a much simplified environmental review because it
involves no new port facilities or new vessel routes near sensitive shorelines,
service could begin as early as 2007 instead of 2009 as per the current WTA
timeline.
The hotel is interested
because it opens more of the
WTA money would also be
available for marina channel maintenance dredging, with a potential savings to
the Marina Fund of 100,000 per year. The would presumably free up Marina Fund
reserves for the float and gangway construction necessary to initiate the
service, and it could be done with zero cost impact to the City's General Fund.
Most important, the total
investment in infrastructure is reduced by $5 million or more, according to
WTA's estimate of terminal construction cost. This drastically reduces the debt
service and the required subsidy level for the new ferry, which makes the
entire concept far more palatable to many public transportation advocates who,
with some justification, see ferries as a relatively inefficient way to solve
transportation problems.
Because the parking
capacity in any Berkeley Marina location is probably limited to 300-500 cars
per weekday, the scale of the service should be kept relatively small compared
to other ferry routes. This makes the viability of the service particularly
sensitive to high first-cost, and points strongly to the use of the existing
facilities inside the marina rather than major new facilities development.
Parking Analysis
Spaces Location
25 Circle
at end of
77 Northside
Launch Ramp,
161 A-E Docks and overflow for
495 Doubletree Hotel
105 East Side of
200 South Sailing Basin Windsurfing area
105 Dock Docks J-K, Marina Adm. Bldg, Bait Shop
115 Southside Cal Sailing and
220 L - M Dock Docks L-M, Berkeley Co.,
Corporation Yard
133 Skates Restaurant Skates,
87 N
- O Docks, Yacht Club
320 HS Lordships Rest. HS Lordships,
65 On-street
Cesar Chavez Park
Total: 2,198
SOURCE:
The Aerial photo
shows spaces within 300 meters of a ferry terminal at the Doubletree Hotel (a 3.7 minute
walk at 3 mph)
Spaces that would directly
serve a ferry terminal at the Doubletree Hotel:
495 Doubletree Hotel
161 A-E Docks and overflow for
78 75% of East Side of
120 1.1 acre of gravel parking east of
Total: 854
In addition there are 77 spaces in the
launch ramp area, approx. 40 parallel spaces along the north side of
Summary: There are about 1,000 spaces that
could realistically serve passengers on a Ferry departing from the Berkeley Marina
Doubletree Hotel. Hourly service by a 149-passenger ferry, assuming 80% arrive
by car (from WTA study) and assuming that all cars are single-occupancy (worst
case, neglecting multiple-passenger vehicles and "kiss-and-ride"
drop-offs) and assuming full boats on three departures, results in an upper
bound for parking demand of 358 spaces over the morning commute. Without these
worst-case assumptions, the actual parking demand probably drops to somewhere
around 300 spaces or less.
There appears to be no practical way to
incorporate dedicated ferry parking. Multi-use is critical. The spaces used by
ferry passengers during commute and working hours are also used by hotel
guests, berthers and park visitors on weekends.
A parking fee is desirable from a
transportation planning point of view, but the close proximity of numerous
other parking areas and the reliance by businesses, non-profit organizations
and