
RESOURCES
ReWild Mission Bay Coalition Statement and Remarks on the De Anza Natural Draft EIR
(April 20, 2023)
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Remarks on the De Anza Natural Proposal
(May 3, 2023)
California Department of Fish and Wildlife Remarks on the De Anza Natural Proposal
(April 20, 2023)
San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board Remarks on the De Anza Natural Proposal
(May 3, 2023)
U.S. Geological Survey Effects of Climate Change on Tidal Marshes
(Nov. 25, 2016)
The ReWild Mission Bay Wetlands Restoration Feasibility Study developed and analyzed a range of wetlands restoration options for the northeastern corner of Mission Bay via a transparent, public process.
These three conceptual plans, dubbed the Wild, Wilder, and Wildest plans, demonstrate feasible, implementable plans for restoration of Mission Bay.
Regarding the fundamental question of whether it is feasible to restore wetlands and associated habitats in the northeast corner of Mission Bay, this study provides an unequivocal answer: yes.

A 12-page summary of the ReWild Mission Bay Feasibility Study is available here.
The final ReWild Mission Bay Wetlands Restoration Feasibility Study (including executive summary and final conceptual restoration plans) is available here.
For all other materials to date, please use the resources below to learn more about the project or learn more about the history of ReWild Mission Bay here. The best way to stay connected on day-to-day developments is to Like and Follow us on Facebook and Instagram, and Sign Up to receive email alerts about the project.
If you can’t find what you’re looking for, let us know.

Helpful Links:
- City of San Diego’s Climate Action Plan Update, which includes a commitment to restore 700 acres of tidal wetlands by 2035.
- ReWild Request for Proposals
- The deadline for proposal submissions was September 1, 2015
- San Diego Audubon
- Kendall Frost Marsh Reserve
- U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
- California State Coastal Conservancy
- Friends of Mission Bay Marshes
- Photo Tour of the Existing Marsh
- Guide to Mission Bay
- History of ReWild Mission Bay: Timeline
Public Meeting Materials:
- ReWild MB Public Workshop #5: December 6, 2018
- Released at the meeting: Final restoration alternatives
- Display Boards used at the meeting:
- Meeting report:
- ReWild MB Public Workshop #4: April 25, 2017
- Released at the meeting: Updated restoration alternatives
- Meeting report:
- ReWild MB Public Workshop #3: September 27, 2016
- Released at the meeting: Draft restoration alternatives
- Meeting Report:
- Final Workshop Summary
- Appendix A – Station Boards (not including draft restoration alternatives)
- Appendix B – Sign in sheets
- Appendix C – Comment cards (.zip)
- Appendix D – Online comments
- ReWild MB Public Workshop #2: June 14, 2016
- Meeting Report:
- Meeting Materials:
- All Boards– Including boards from Workshop #1
- Welcome/What is ReWild MB?
- Study Area Map
- Summary of Workshop #1 Public Input
- Draft Project Goals
- Provide Input on Goals
- Goals Worksheet– Feel free to fill it out and send it to the project team by July 1st!
- Map Worksheet– Feel free to fill it out and send it to the project team by July 1st!
- How are ReWild MB and the De Anza Revitalization Plan working together?
- ReWild MB Public Workshop #1: March 16, 2016
- Community Representative Group (CRG) Meeting #1: November 17, 2015
Project Reports:
- Opportunities and Constraints Report (Completed by Everest International, Finalized August 2016). Download here.
- Existing Conditions Report (Completed by Everest International, finalized July 2016). Download here.
- Mission Bay Historical Ecology Reconnaissance Study (Completed February 2016 by the San Francisco Estuary Institute)
- Technical Report: Describes archives visited, summarizes collected and compiled data, identifies future work and possible next steps. Download here.
- Presentation: Summarizes data collection and compilation efforts, discusses key preliminary findings, outlines questions raised by the dataset, and potential future research. Download here.
6 replies on “Resources”
[…] marks the culmination of a two-year effort by the ReWild Coalition since the ReWild Mission Bay Wetlands Restoration Feasibility Study was released to the public in Sept. […]
[…] worth of the Mission Bay wetlands. Our project estimates what it will be value to implement the ReWild Mission Bay Coalition’s “wildest” plan, which might create 227 acres of latest wetland straight adjoining to Kendall-Frost Marsh on the […]
[…] value of the Mission Bay wetlands. Our project estimates what it would be worth to implement the ReWild Mission Bay Coalition’s “wildest” plan, which would create 227 acres of new wetland directly adjacent to Kendall-Frost Marsh at the […]
[…] what it would be worth to implement the ReWild Mission Bay Coalition’s “wildest” plan, which would create 227 acres of new wetland directly adjacent to Kendall-Frost Marsh (currently 40 […]
[…] value of the Mission Bay wetlands. Our project estimates what it would be worth to implement the ReWild Mission Bay Coalition’s “wildest” plan, which would create 227 acres of new wetland directly adjacent to Kendall-Frost Marsh at the […]
[…] Mission Bay Park Master Plan calls for an additional 80 acres of wetlands remaining in 2100. The ReWild Mission Bay Coalition feasibility study models sea-level rise and has identified the amount of habitat that must be restored now to insure […]