Table 5. Marina Del Rey Fact Sheet 



Public Recreational Facilities 



Residential and Transient Facilities 



Boating Facilities 



Public Beach and Picnic Area 



Hotels and Motels 



5,600 Boat SUps 



Spectator Events: 



16 Apartment Complexes 



Beach launching area for hand-carried boats 



Regattas, Crew Races, 



22 Restaurants 



Launching facilities for trailer-bome boats 



Boat Parades, Sailing Races 





(both by ramp and high-speed hoist) 



Sportfishing, Harbor Cruisers 





Dry storage of trailer-boats 



Boat Rental and Sailing Instruction 





Yacht Clubs 



Fisherman's Village 





Repair Yards, Fuel Docks and Pumpout 



Theater 





Station, Live Bait 



Shopping Centers 







Direct Freeway Access via 







Marina Freeway 







Statistics: 



780-acre site (405 acres of water, 375 acres of land). 

 2,340 feet of offshore breakwater. 



2 miles of main channel, 1,000 feet wide and 10 feet deep. 



3 miles of side basin, 600 feet wide and 10 feet deep. 

 7.5 miles of concrete bulkhead. 



6 miles of landscaped boulevard roadways. 

 All utilities underground 



Future Development 



Private Development of Facilities 



Public Development of Site 





Facility 



Cost 



Site 



Cost 



Hotels, Motels, Office Buildings, 



Slips 



$ 8,250,000 



Federal Government: 50 percent 





Library, Public Park, 



Apartment Units 



86,900,000 



of main navigation features 



$ 4,600,000 



Fire Station 



Hotels and Motels 



4,350,000 



State Government: 





Construction activity estimated 



Restaurants 



4,000,000 



Site acquisition 



2,000,000 



at $42 million for 1972 



Commercial 



7,700,000 



County Government: 







Yacht Clubs 



1,800,000 



Land acquisition, 50 percent of 



main navigation features 

 Proceeds from sale of revenue bonds: 



Site preparation 

 Motor Vehicle Fund: 



Perimeter roads 



15,875,000 



13,000,000 



775,000 



Total Cost 



$113,000,000 





$36,250,000 



Economic Impact on Area: 



Taxes paid by lessees provide significant new tax revenue for county, city schools, etc. 



New community with projected permanent population of 10,000 and seasonal peak-day population of 30,000. 



Over 200 individual businesses, providing 6,000 to 8,000 new jobs. 



Leads the way in the area planning for full development potential of Santa Monica Bay. 



Income: 



Revenue derived from leases (estimated over $3 million annually) will service bond debt, pay operating expenses 

 and repay State and County loans. 



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