►
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
A
Good
morning
everybody,
my
name
is
Brady
I
am
the
shoreline
manager
in
the
community
services
department
for
the
city
of
Mountain
View,
so
my
office
is
located
right
over
at
the
ringstorff
house
here
and
so
with
that.
Allow
me
to
officially
welcome
everyone,
and
thank
you
all
for
being
here.
This
is
the
kickoff
to
our
speaker
series
for
the
40th
anniversary
of
Shoreline,
at
Mountain,
View
opening
to
the
public,
and
so
I
want
to
start
with
a
few
thank
yous.
First
I
want
to
thank
Michael's
Restaurant
for
hosting
us.
A
We
want
to
thank
kmvt
for
helping
us
with
recording
our
presenter
Ray,
we'll
get
to
more
in
a
sec.
I
want
to
thank
our
Shoreline
staff,
specifically
Christina
Perino,
who
helped
put
this
whole
event
on
and
led
the
charge
and
then
really
want
to
thank
our
our
city,
leadership.
I
know
we
have
council
members,
council,
member
matacek.
Thank
you.
We
have
PRC,
we
have
all
of
our
boards
and
commissions
and
I
know.
A
lot
of
you
are
Community
leaders
for
us
and
I.
So
I
want
to
thank
you
all
for
helping
us
Steward.
A
All
that
has
happened
at
Shoreline
recently
and
that
is
currently
going
on.
We
couldn't
do
it
without
the
support
from
from
all
of
you,
so
Shoreline
was
officially
open
to
the
public
July
17
1983
as
a
750
acre
wildlife
and
Recreation
Area.
We
currently
have
over
10
miles
of
Pathways
and
trails,
50
acre
sailing,
Lake
and
18-hole
golf
course.
Two
restaurants,
the
historic
ringstorff
house,
a
dog
park,
a
kite
flying
area
and
multiple
sensitive
habitats,
grasslands,
tidal
marshes
and
other
various
wetlands,
and
so
Ray
will
get
into
more
of
this.
A
But
it's
also
all
built
on
top
of
a
landfill.
Well,
not
all
of
it,
but
a
lot
of
it,
and
so
we're
really
lucky
to
have
such
a
unique
space
in
the
city
of
Mountain
View
and
that
we
all
get
to
enjoy
every
day.
So,
while
Shoreline
currently
offers
these
great
activities
and
amenities,
today's
event
will
look
back
on
how
we
got
here,
Bray's
going
to
dive
into
the
creation
of
Shoreline
and
Mountain
View.
A
This
is
the
first
as
I
said,
of
a
multi-part
educational
speaker,
series
that
looks
at
the
past
present
and
future
of
Shoreline,
and
so
this
one
today
we'll
look
at
the
past
and
how
we
got
here.
Our
next
one
is
June
25th.
There
were
Flyers
at
the
table
when
you
walked
in
and
if
you
didn't
get
one,
you
can
grab
one
on
the
way
out.
A
That
will
look
at
the
present
and
focus
on
the
wildlife
and
habitat
conservation
efforts
that
we're
doing
that
will
also
be
at
Michael's,
and
you
can
register
online
at
mountainview.gov
Shoreline
and
then
we'll
also
be
hosting
two
events
in
the
fall,
one
of
which
will
be
looking
at
sea
level
rise
in
the
future
of
Shoreline,
but
we're
still
working
out
the
final
Logistics
on
those.
A
So
we'll
have
the
the
dates
the
times
and
a
lot
more
of
that
information
in
the
next
couple
weeks,
and
then
I
also
wanted
to
state
that,
while
Ray
is
going
to
focus
on
the
creation
of
Shoreline
amount
view,
the
history
out
here
goes
much
further
back
than
1973
and
much
further
back
in
the
1960s.
A
We're
not
going
to
dive
into
all
that
right
now,
but
there
are
resources
with
the
friends
of
ringstorff
House,
Mountain,
View,
historical
Association,
and
so
we
would
recommend
if
you
want
to
go
back
and
learn
more
about
the
Native
Americans
that
were
here,
the
ring
store
family.
We
have
a
lot
of
that
information
at
the
ringstorff
house
as
well,
and
so
there
are
more
historical
resources,
but
this
one's
going
to
be
a
really
cool
presentation,
focusing
on
what
got
created
here.
We
also
have
over
here
on
the
table
a
few
photos.
A
Those
photos
were
the
renderings
of
what
Shoreline
might
have
been
at
one
point,
which
I
believe
rail
also
touch
on
and
then
also
Michael's
getting
built.
And
so,
if
you
want
to
see
those
photos,
those
will
be
there
after
we're
done
with
the
presentation
as
well,
and
so
with
that
we
have
Ray
Rodriguez.
So
Rey
is
someone
with
a
tremendous
amount
of
knowledge
and
stories
behind
how
Shoreline
got
here.
Ray
worked
for
the
city
of
mountain
view
for
34
years
retiring
in
2022.
A
He
he
actually
began
his
career
out
here
at
Shoreline
in
the
shoreline
division.
Assisting
the
city
to
manage
the
landfill,
Ray
LED
projects
to
build
landfill
infrastructure
and
to
keep
the
city
in
Regulatory
Compliance,
with
state
regulations
in
1996
Ray
transferred
to
the
city's
public
works
department.
A
In
that
role
he
led
many
notable
City
projects,
including
design
of
many
new
community
Parks
establishment
of
a
new
Downtown
parking
structure,
replacement
of
the
city's
library
and
then
including
renovation
projects,
to
keep
the
library
current
during
his
years
with
Public
Works
Ray
was
pleased
and
we
were
fortunate
that
he
also
had
a
number
of
projects
that
brought
him
back
to
Shoreline,
where
he
could
contribute
his
knowledge
in
history
with
us.
A
On
a
personal
note,
Ray
has
been
invaluable
to
me
since
I've
been
out
at
Shoreline
I,
don't
believe,
there's
any
staff
member
out
here
that
does
an
o-ray
a
favor
and
return
at
some
point.
So
it's
a
honor
and
we're
really
happy
to
have
him
here
and
so
I'm
excited
to
pass
it
over
to
him
and
for
him
to
get.
Let
you
guys
learn
some
of
the
stuff
that
I
get
to
learn
from
him
almost
every
day.
So,
with
that
I'll
hand
it
over
to
Ray.
B
As
Brady
said:
I
started
with
the
city
34
well
now,
almost
35
years
ago,
since
I've
been
retired
for
a
year
and
I
started
out
here
at
Shoreline,
and
this
place
stole
my
heart
from
the
day,
I
visited
the
very
first
time
in
the
in
the
1980s
and
I'm,
also
kind
of
a
history
buff
and
through
my
career
working
for
the
city,
I
would
dabble
into
digging
deeper
into
the
history
of
Mountain,
View
and
so
over
time.
B
B
This
is
a
we're
here
to
to
learn
about
Shoreline
I'm,
going
to
go
back
to
how
we
got
to
this
place,
how
we
we,
the
the
city
council,
the
leadership
in
the
city
How,
how
this
became
this
community
treasure
that
we
have
today
yeah
and
then
I'm
going
to
go
a
little
deeper
into
Shoreline.
So
we're
going
to
talk
about.
B
So
I
have
a
question
and
by
the
way,
if
you
have
questions
as
I'm
talking
just
let
me
know
just
raise
your
hand
and
ask
so.
B
A
B
Okay,
all
right,
let's
see
19
well
1980
to
to
1990.
yeah,
then
how
about
how
about
anybody
that
was
here
on
July,
17
1983
for
the
dedication
or
the
opening
of
the
park?
Anyone
here
interesting
well,
I,
didn't
learn
about
this
place
until
late
1980s
and
it's
and
and
I've
watched
it
grow.
B
B
So
Mountain
View's
Treasures,
so
this
overall
this
is
this-
is
an
aerial
of
of
Shoreline
and
just
getting
the
sense
here.
The
top
is
North
Northerly
here:
Shoreline
Boulevard,
here's,
the
gate,
house
and,
of
course,
we're
right
on
the
other
side
of
the
pond.
Here
at
Michael's.
At
the
moment
you
see
the
saline
Lake,
the
Salt
Ponds
at
the
top.
B
We've
got
the
front
nine
of
the
golf
course
and
the
back
nine,
which
is
back
five
and
four
there's
your
back:
nine,
the
athletic
fields,
the
Crittenden
site,
the
Vista
site
and
the
amphitheater
just
to
give
you
a
sense
of
the
layout,
but
the
original,
the
original
land
mass
when
this
was
formed
was
was
called.
The
544
Acre
Site,
and
the
red
line
here
is
showing
the
outline
of
the
original
544
Acre
Site.
That
was
what
the
city
at
the
time
wanted
to
you
to
to
to
improve
on.
B
The
critino
site
was
also
purchased
by
the
city
in
the
1980s.
This
was
this
was
back
in
the
70s
when
the
city
bought
this,
but
this
was
in
the
80s
on
Crittenden
site.
B
B
D
B
I
think
in
the
1960s
it
was
reasonably
priced.
It
became
more
more
expensive,
as
the
commercial
developments
start
to
occur
in
the
north,
what
we
call
a
North
Bay
Shore.
So
when
you,
when
you
look
at
101
here,
everything
North
is
referred
to
as
North
Bay
Shore.
Today,
right
and
I'm
gonna
get
into
the
Vista
slope
later
the
purchase,
but
the
city
of
San
Francisco
helped
buy
that
property
in
the
70s.
B
B
B
B
B
D
B
What
I
didn't
point
out
in
that
last
photo
I'll
point
out
here
is
that
the
city
had
a
sewage
treatment
plant
out
here.
So
all
of
the
sewage
from
the
city
came
out
to
the
treatment
plant
it
was
treated
and
then
the
athlete
was
sent
into
the
bay
this
line,
you
can
see
a
line
here.
This
is
one
of
the
main
sewage
pipelines
going
to
the
plant
at
the
time.
B
B
B
B
B
B
We
talked-
and
she
was
just
wonderful,
Hazel
Gibson
talking
to
her
for
years
and
then
later
on.
I
come
across
one
of
these
documents,
and
her
name
is
on
that
document
that
she
served
on
this
committee
and
that
was
really
kind
of
cool
to
actually
meet
somebody
who
was
part
of
this.
You
can
see
the
text
here.
The
U.S
department
of
Interior
Bureau
of
outdoor
recreation
provided
some
funding
for
Shoreline
at
the
time.
The
county
also
would
get
involved
at
the
time,
so
the
name
of
the
part
the
name
of
this
place.
B
B
Okay,
I
know
you
can't
read
the
text
there,
but
this
is
an
article
in
the
newspaper,
the
Sunnyvale
standard
from
1968,
and
this
article
was
talking
about
the
the
the
Santiago
Village.
It's
the
second
paragraph
there
Santiago
Village
had
just
made
an
announcement.
They
were
going
to
build
that
Park
and
there
was
a
big
to
do.
They
said
this
is
going
to
be
the
best
mobile
home
park
anywhere.
B
B
An
18-hole
golf
course:
we
got
that
restaurants,
we
got.
We
have
that
a
40
acre
I
like
this
man-made
Lake.
We
won't
use
that
terminology
today,
a
junior
Zoo,
Museum
Aquarium
theater
in
the
round
is
it
amphithe
Shoreline
Amphitheater,
Sports,
Pavilion,
Tennis,
Center,
all-weather,
Rifle
and
Pistol
Range,
and
an
80
acre
medal
for
camping,
horseback
riding
bicycling
Etc
foreign.
B
But
by
1970
this
is
also
from
a
newspaper,
the
Mountain
View
News
Herald
by
1970.
The
city
had
signed
a
contract
with
the
city
of
San
Francisco
to
accept
their
garbage.
So
let's
back
up
I
skipped
something
in
order
to
develop,
Shoreline
and
and
and
to
deal
with
all
that
flooding
that
was
occurring
every
year.
The
ground
engineers
said
the
ground
level
needs
to
come
up
so
that
we
don't
flood.
B
We
can
bring
in
a
lot
of
dirt
at
a
very
huge
expense.
I
I
think
they
were
talking,
17
million
dollars
for
the
dirt,
or
we
could
raise
the
ground
with
garbage
and
after
you've
raised
all
the
ground
with
garbage.
You
cover
it
with
some
more
dirt
and
you
make
it
Park,
and
that
was
the
direction
they
were
going
with
Shoreline.
B
So
now
you
need
to
go.
Get
all
that
garbage.
San
Francisco
had
a
garbage
problem.
They
had
no
place
to
take
their
garbage,
and
so
the
city
and
of
Mountain
View
and
San
Francisco
signed
a
contract
that
we
would
take
their
garbage
I
think
it
was
a
five-year
deal
initially
and
while
they,
while
San
Francisco,
worked
out
what
their
next
step
would
be
to
handling
their
own
garbage.
B
B
B
B
F
B
I
think
even
in
1970s
they
knew
enough
to
keep
hazardous
materials
out
of
the
garbage
stream,
but
I,
but
even
in
1970.
If
you
went
to
the
store
to
get
a
gallon
of
paint
to
paint
your
house
that
gallon
of
paint
most
likely
had
lead
in
it,
and
now
we
know
that
is
a
not
a
healthy
thing,
so
I
imagine
they.
B
G
Okay,
I
came
here
in
1995
to
work
at
silicon
graphics,
and
at
that
time
they
told
us
that
you
know
like
be
careful
like
getting
a.
What
do
you
call
those
things
a
lighter?
You
know,
because
you
know
that
there
would
be
butane
that
was
coming
up
out
of
the
ground
and
that
you
know
you
could
actually
start
a
fire.
You
know
if
somebody
like
we're
doing
something
as
unwise
as
trying
to
light
up
a
cigarette
or
something
is
there
any
truth
to
that,
or
is
that
just
an
urban
legend?
It's.
B
It
started
at
the
amphitheater
and
I'll
go
into
some
of
those
details
about
that
landfill,
but
basically
the
at
the
time
we
were
getting
publicity
that
there
were
Fires
at
the
amphitheater
where
people
were
just
sitting
there
with
a
lighter
I've
heard
different
stories
about
that
about
what
actually,
because
at
the
time
in
the
1980s
I
think
it
was
popular
for
people
to
take
hairspray
and
light
it
and
I
think
people
would
well
because
then
you'll
be
like
a
little
flamethrower
and
I've
heard
that
people
were
doing
that.
B
B
So
I
have
a
question:
I
mean
I,
I.
Think
I.
Look
here
so
I
remember
when
I
was
a
kid
and
I
grew
up
in
Colorado
in
Denver,
in
the
60s
and
70s,
but
in
the
70s
remember
my
dad
would
say:
let's
clean
up
this
yard
and
we'd
load
up
all
kinds
of
stuff
into
the
back
of
the
truck
and
drive
out
the
landfill
and
I'm
like
10
years
old,
11
years
old
and
we'd
get
out
there
and
then
it
just
smelled
and
reeked
right.
Do
you
all
have
similar
experiences?
B
B
You
know
today,
kids,
you
know
we
don't
we
don't
go
to
the
dump
anymore
right.
You
have
something
large
to
dispose
of.
You
can
get
a
large
bulk
item.
Pickup,
you
just
call
the
garbage
company
and
they'll
come
pick
that
up.
You
don't
have
to
take
it
yourself,
in
fact,
that
refrigerator
you
want
to
get
rid
of
they'll
come
pick
it
up
and
it
all
gets
recycled.
They
don't
want
that
in
the
landfill
anymore,
so
we
generally
as
a
society,
don't
spend
much
time
in
a
landfill
like
this
anymore.
B
All
right
1977.,
this
is
Permanente
Creek.
So
now
all
that
garbage
is
starting
to
get
our
ground
levels
raised
some
of
the
first
areas,
so
this
is.
This
is
Garcia
on
the
other
side
of
the
park
and
then
the
saline
like
at
the
top.
So
this
is
one
of
the
first
areas
that
was
landfilled
and
over
the
years,
I've
actually
had
projects
where
we
board
holes
into
the
garbage
and
to
to
look
at
it.
B
The
golf
course
and
outside
the
golf
course
would
need
irrigation
and
the
City
built
an
irrigation
pump
station
decided.
We
would
have
a
pump
station,
we
would
distribute
that
water
and
we
would
use
reclaimed
water
for
that
irrigation
system.
But
we
also
had
these
ponds
built
as
reservoirs
to
store
the
water.
B
So
each
Pond
is
connected
by
a
pipe
from.
This
is
one
Pond
one,
two
three
and
four,
so
this
flows
into
that
that
pond
flows
into
this
one
it
flows
into
the
larger
one
and
I
don't
have
a
picture
of
this
saw,
but
the
larger
Pond
eventually
flows
into
the
irrigation
pump
station,
which
is
near
the
amphitheater,
and
that
was
our
water
to
irrigate
the
park.
B
Now,
because
we
have
a
direct
connection
for
reclaimed
water
with
the
City
of
Palo
Alto
we're
bringing
that
water.
In
now,
we
didn't
have
the
need
for
these
ponds
to
serve
as
a
reservoir
anymore
and
what
we
did
about
10
years
ago
when
we
started
seeing
Canadian
geese
and
Coots
just
starting
to
take
over
the
golf
course.
B
Staff
and
biologists
found
that
they
were
attracted
by
the
water.
If
we
take
the
water
away,
they
will
go
away
and
at
the
time
we
wanted
some
more
habitat
that
didn't
include
water.
So
the
solution
was
drain,
these
three
ponds
and
convert
them
to
a
dry
habitat,
and
so,
if
you
go
out
there
now
that's
what
you
can
see
and
they're
dedicated
city
council
at
the
time
approved
them.
They're
they're
habitat
in
perpetuity
means
forever.
B
Now
I
actually
stance
this
photo
from
Google
Earth
1978.,
it's
a
little
blurry,
but
you
get
the
picture
here
by
1978
you're,
starting
to
see
a
lot
of
the
formation
of
Shoreline
here
coming
together.
Now,
Anthony
Parkway
is
not
in
place
yet,
but
it'll
eventually
get
put
in
here,
but
you
can
see
the
candy
cane
hook
there
of
Shoreline.
The
lake
is
still
in
development.
It
hasn't
been
filled.
Yet
the
lake
was
really
a
borrow
pit
for
the
soil
that
they
needed
to
cover
the
garbage
I'll.
Get
to
that
too.
B
Found
this
photo
in
the
archives,
I
guess
this
was
opening
day
and
there's
someone
having
a
picnic.
You
could
see
the
sailing
Lake
actually
over
the
years
when
I
would
do
projects
out
here,
I,
remember
working
with
some
contractors
and
Consultants
who
would
come
out
to
do
work
and
they
would
just
have
just
discovered
Shoreline
and
some
of
them
were
wind
Sailors
or
they
wanted
to
try
wind
sailing,
and
so
after
they
worked
for
us
a
little
bit,
they
would
come
back
out
here
and
spend
time
at
the
lake.
B
This
is
a
the
energy
Trail
which
you
could
walk
behind
the
amphitheater
Vista
slope
is
here
and
it
has
garbage
and
the
lawn
seating
area
has
garbage,
but
the
fixed
seating
area
does
not.
All
of
this
does
not
have
garbage,
but
there
is
some
in
this
area,
so
this
is
1985
when
this
photo
was
taken
and
I
believe
the
first
concert.
B
Okay,
anybody
go
to
the
first
concert
at
Shoreline,
raise
your
hand
I
understand.
The
first
concert
at
Shoreline
was
Julio
Iglesias
and
Willie
Nelson.
That
was
back
in
the
1980s
when
they
were
doing
that.
Duet.
B
So
Shoreline
starts
to
what
I
well,
when
I
come
out
to
Shoreline
the
first
time
we
have
the
Pro
Shop
a
small
building.
It
was
a
small
little
structure.
The
reichstorff
house
is
sitting
there
and
I'm
gonna
have
slide
for
that.
It's
just
nothing,
but
there
really
are
no
structures
out
here,
except
that
Pro
Shop,
but
in
the
early
1980s
here
is
The
Boathouse
in
construction.
So
now
we're
starting
to
put
the
few
buildings
in
place
that
you
see
today.
B
The
ranksdorf
house,
1990.
I,
took
these
photos
myself,
because
I
had
started
working
on
a
project
to
re-grade
the
area
around
the
ranksdorf
house,
because
there
were
plans
we
were
renovating,
the
the
building
was
pending
and
that's
what
lovely
home
we
have
today
and
then
back
at
the
Crittenden
site
by
the
the
late
90s.
B
We're
closing
up
that
landfill
and
finishing
it
off.
This
is
this:
is
this
area
is
getting
filled
up
with
dirt
so
that
we
get
that
large
parking
lot
that
you
see
out
there
today,
but
there
was
garbage
out
there
that
we
had
to
relocate
and
re-sculpt,
but
what
you
have
out
there
today
is
that
large
parking
lot
and
only
the
hillside
has
garbage
now,
where
you
park,
there's
no
garbage.
So
that's
not
going
to
settle.
Is
it?
Is
this
going
to
stay
as
stable
as
as
it
is
today,
all
right?
So,
what's
under
the
surface.
B
We
didn't
actually
Implement
all
of
what
you
see,
but
it
was
a
master
plan.
It
was
a
it
was
a
direction
where
we
were
trying
to
go.
B
This
is
showing
some
of
the
systems
that
we
had
to
put
in,
but
over
here
you
see
all
these
little.
These
numbers
that
are
throughout
the
the
plan,
one
B.
This
is
cell.
One
B,
there's
garbage
here,
there's
garbage
here
in
1C
and
in
2B,
but
at
the
top,
where
it
says
e
anywhere.
You
see
an
e
there's,
no
garbage
the
E
stands
for
engineer,
fill.
B
So
there's
E1
there
here
where
the
ringstorf
house
is
E9
E2
and
E3
the
driving
range
E10.
So
we've
got
a
few
errors
that
were
left
as
engineer
filled
that
could
be
developed
at
some
point
in
the
future.
This
is
1990
right.
There
was
a
consideration
of
the
time
to
put
a
conference
center
here
at
E10.
B
B
B
And
here's
the
Crittenden
site,
you
can
see
we
had
planned
for
systems
here,
but
ultimately
we
took
all
this
garbage
and
stockpiled
it
into
one
location
which
you
see
is
the
hill
out
there
now
and
then
this
is
all
just
parking
lot.
This
is,
this
would
be
considered
engineer
filled
today
and
then
the
Fire
Department
fire
station.
Five
is
right
here
in
the
corner.
C
B
B
B
Riser
leachate
is
the
liquid
that
accumulates
at
the
bottom
of
a
landfill
like
that,
so
that
liquid
is
just
if,
if
you
throw
away
something
in
the
garbage
that
has
a
little
bit
of
liquid
in
it
and
everybody's
doing
that,
eventually,
you
end
up
with
a
liquid
mess
at
the
bottom
of
the
landfill
and
it
might
even
be
from
rain
water,
because
the
landfill
is
open
for
a
period
of
time
to
bring
in
garbage
and
we
have
rain
days.
So
some
of
it
might
even
just
be
rain.
B
So
there's
the
leachate
extraction.
Well,
because
we
want
to
take
this
out
the
liquid.
We
don't
want
it
to
build
up
too
much
and
then
there's
landfill
gases,
the
landfill
trash
decomposes.
It
creates
a
methane
and
other
gases,
and
then
you
cap
it
off
with
a
12
inch.
Well,
there's
a
12
inch
layer
of
clay
over
the
garbage
and
then
there's
a
24
inches
of
topsoil
and
I.
Think
that's
now
three
feet
of
topsoil
today
standards.
B
B
It
was
not
something
we
we
could
see
in
the
90s
and
even
early
2000s
I
think,
but
it
is
today.
Yes
would
we
have
done
gone
taller?
We
we
weren't,
really
aware
of
a
sea
level
rise
potential
in
the
90s
early
80s,
but
there
is
a
solution
and,
and,
as
Brady
said,
there's
going
to
be
a
talk
about
that.
But
the
easy
quick
answer
is
that
they'll
just
raise
the
levy
along
the
Bayside.
B
B
B
B
It's
going
to
leak
in
rather
than
the
liquid
coming
out.
The
hydrostatic
pressure
is,
what's
the
difference
here,
so
more
pressure
to
go
in
than
to
come
out
and
if
it's
going
in,
then
we
can
pump
it.
We
won't
contaminate
the
groundwater.
So
that's
an
ideal
situation
for
us.
That's
the
situation
we
want.
B
B
So
this
is
a
more
current
layout
of.
What's
actually
out,
there,
I
got
this
this
map
from
our
city
cruise
and
Engineers
that
are
working
today
on
Shoreline,
and
this
is
shown
the
red
lines
are
showing
really
the
network
of
piping.
That's
out
underneath
the
surface.
So
when
you're
walking
out
there,
you
have
no
idea
what's
beneath
the
surface,
but
all
of
this
is
out
there
it's
miles
of
pipe,
and
this
pipe
is
collecting
either
landfill,
gas
or
leachate.
B
The
leachate
will
go
to
the
sanitary
sewer,
so
it
could
get
treated
at
the
sewage
treatment
plant.
The
gas
is
getting.
We've
got
a
vacuum
on
the
on
the
pipe,
so
they're,
just
sucking
out
the
gas
out
of
the
landfill,
taking
it
to
a
central
location
and
burning
it.
If
you
burn
it
at
1400
to
1450
degrees
Fahrenheit,
it's
considered
a
complete
destruction
of
those
bad
gases
and
whatever's
in
the
in
the
in
the
gas
itself.
B
So
it's
a
complete
destruction
of
it.
So
we're
not
polluting
our
environment.
In
some
cases
it
can
be
used
as
a
fuel
for
a
micro
turbine
to
generate
electricity
and
I.
Think
the
city
has
done
a
lot
of
that
over
the
years.
As
well
and
I
believe
does
Google
still,
Google
still
is
using
some
of
that
gas
for
power
generation.
B
B
The
other
thing
about
this
is
these
are
smaller
than
the
original
flares
that
were
installed
in
1989
in
a
project.
I
was
involved
in
the
flares
at
that
time
were
probably
twice
the
circumference
of
these
flares.
The
reason
they
downsize
them
is
the
amount
of
gas
being
generated
is
is
starting
to
to
to
lower
there's
less
gas
generated,
because
the
garbage
is
so
old.
It's
eventually
going
to
just
not
generate
any
more
curb
landfill
gas.
B
So
if
the
first,
if
the
first
land
garbage
went
in
in
about
1971.
B
B
Okay,
so
this
is
a
very
simple
drawing
of
a
leachate
extraction.
Well,
so
if
this
is
the
bottom
of
the
landfill
and
I,
don't
have
the
lead
shade
in
here,
but
imagine
the
leachate
build
it
up
here,
and
this
is
a
pipe
into
the
that
goes
all
the
way
down
to
the
bottom.
These
circles
represent
a
way
to
get
that
liquid
into
the
pipe
and
then
inside
the
pipe.
We
have
a
pump
that
will
pump
it
out
and
across
and
send
it
off
to
be
treated
so.
B
D
B
B
And
a
presenter
was
talking
about
the
solution
that
they
had
just
come
up
with
and
Mark
and
I
that
were
there
we
looked
at
each
other
and
said:
we've
already
installed
ours
and
they
work.
So
yes,
that
sleeve
was
really
and
that's
what
we
have
all
over
Shoreline
it's
this
type
of
a
design.
B
B
One
of
the
things
we
did
for
all
of
the
light
poles
was
over
excavate,
a
large
area
put
down
clay
soil
and
then
the
you
would
think
that
that
I'm
sure
you've
seen
where
the
installation
of
a
light
pole
or
their
street
light
a
traffic
light.
A
contractor
will
go
just
build
just
drill.
A
big
large
hole
put
some
rebar
in
there,
fill
it
with
concrete
and
then
have
some
bolts
coming
out
of
the
concrete,
and
then
they
just
attach
the
light
to
it
and
bolt
it
on
and
you're
done.
So
there's
this.
B
We
couldn't
do
that
here
because
it's
like
taking
a
pencil
and
just
saying,
there's
landfill
there,
we'll
just
push
it
down,
it'll
just
sink
so
each
one
of
these
light
poles
is
on
like
a
a
podium.
It's
a
spread
footing
so
they're
these
large
blocks
of
concrete
that
are
spread
out
so
that
it
stabilizes
it
now.
If
they're
settlement,
it
all
settles
at
the
same
rate,
but
because
this
is
part
of
the
oldest
garbage
at
Shoreline
we're
seeing
very
little
settlement
because
most
of
the
settlement
occurred
many
years
ago,
Plus.
B
B
B
And
this
is
it:
was
they
use
a
tube?
They
use
a
tube
that
they
push
down
inside
and
when
they
pull
it
back
up,
they
are
able
to
take
that
tube
apart,
and
these
are,
this
is
one
half
of
the
tubes
on
this
is
at
the
bottom.
This
is
part
of
the
clay
at
the
bottom
and
by
the
way,
what
we
do
after
this
is,
they
fill
it
up
with
a
bentonite
clay
material
to
plug
it.
But
this
is
the
bottom,
and
this
is
closer
to
the
top.
It's
just
black
black
oily
messy,
smelly,
gunk.
B
Even
when
you're
standing
up
here,
you
could
smell
that
it
is
when
you're
out
there
for
a
few
hours
you
get
used
to
it.
So
this
was
all
they
obtained
data.
They
took
samples
and
then
they
came
up.
The
engineers
came
up
with
the
plan
of
we
put
if
we
put
soil
out
there
on
top
overburden,
they
determine
what
our
result,
what
we're
looking
for
and
we
monitored
the
settlement
rate
and
once
we
achieved
that
we
are
ready
to
start
construction
of
the
athletic
fields.
H
B
Okay,
yes,
it's
an
odd
number,
but
I've
also
have
seen
the
record
of
survey
that
it's
generated
and
it's
544
Acres.
It
is
I,
think
750
Acres
now
because
you're,
including
the
Vista
slope
and
the
Crittenden
site.
I
So
that
original
plan
included
a
zoo
and
all
sorts
of
other
stuff,
a
museum,
an
aquarium
and
all
so
in
the
end,
how
did
they
decide
which
of
those
features
to
keep
and
which
to
discard?
How
did
that
happen.
B
I
think
that
the
reality
sunk
in
on
the
project,
you
need
a
lot
more
engineer,
feel
areas
to
have
those
you
couldn't
build.
Those
things
on
top
of
garbage
the
flare
station
is
a
structure
that's
actually
built
on
top
of
a
portion
of
the
landfill.
That
was
the
last
the
the
last
structure
that
was
ever
built
over
garbage.
B
We
need
the
city
needs
to
get
regulatory
approval
at
the
state
level
for
anything
that
we
do
here,
they
will
not
allow
any
building
over
garbage,
so
it
just
wasn't
wise
to
build
anything
over
garbage
over
refuse.
So
if
we
started
going
down
that
road,
then
it
would
take
away
from
bringing
more
garbage
and
more
income,
so
they
scaled
it
back.
B
There
was
supposed
to
be
a
marina.
You
could
bring
boats
and
then
yeah
it
was.
It
was
quite
you
can
take
a
look
at
the
some
of
the
early
plans
there,
the
the
on
the
table
there's
some
photos
afterwards,
but
Shoreline
Boulevard,
just
as
after
you
come
in
through
the
Gatehouse,
you
start
immediately
starting
to
feel
dips.
B
One
of
my
projects
in
like
2006
was
to
raise
that
back
up
because
it
settled
quite
a
bit
more
at
that
time.
We
raised
it
up
and
level
it,
and
that
was
in
2006,
and
this
is
a
result
of
what
was
it
15
18
years
now,
but
originally
the
road
was
supposed
to
be
an
engineer,
fill
but
I've
seen
documents
where
the
engineers
at
the
time
did
a
quick
calculation
decided.
If,
if
we
put
garbage
where
the
road
is,
we
could
bring
in
X
cubic
feet
and
tonnage
and
more
income.
B
E
B
Actually,
one
of
the
ones
that
we
studied
quite
a
bit
was
City
of
Industry
in
Southern
California
had
a
hotel
not
on
landfill,
but
within
a
landfill
area.
They
had
a
golf
course
built
over
over
garbage
and
I.
Remember
going
there
for
a
conference
and
they
were
making
a
big
deal
out
of
their
golf
course
and
all
the
golf
and
that
it's
over
refuse,
but
they
also
built
part
of
their
parking
lot
over
garbage
and
it
had
a
concrete
floor
and
I
remember
going
out
there
that
you
could
actually
see
the
settlement.
B
The
floor
was
floating
almost
and
you
could
see
underneath
the
slab
because
they
had
settlement.
So
it
was
all
learning,
not
not
I'm,
not
criticizing
what
they
did.
It's
just
that
we
were
all
learning
at
the
time.
Landfill
I
was
the
city's
landfill
engineer
and
you
could
say
well
landfill
engineer.
That
means
you
can
do
calculations.
You
think
you
can
study.
You
have
all
the
answers
in
a
book
somewhere.
B
B
It
I
think
because
of
the
age
of
the
landfill
here
you
will
not
see
much
more
settling
Vista
slope.
That's
a
very
thick
amount
of
garbage
that
will
settle
more,
but
all
out
here,
the
original
544
Acre
Site,
where
we
have
garbage
I
think
we're
we're.
Looking
at
the
end
of
its
settlement
period,
yeah.
C
B
So
they'll
look
at
that
question
is:
is
there
something
I
would
do
differently
well
like
for,
for
example,
Shoreline
Boulevard
I
I
would
differently,
I
would
not
put
garbage
under
the
roadway,
but
otherwise
no
I
mean
it's
working,
pretty
good.
Yes,
yes,
I
think
I.
Think.
B
I've
been
I,
I
was
out
here
in
an
earthquake
in
the
early
or
late
80s
I
think
we
had
an
earthquake
well
right
before
Oh
I
was
here
for
that
one
too,
but
I
was
actually
on
the
landfill
I
think
it
was
in
April
of
89.
We
had
a
small
roll
and
the
and
the
the
landfill
just
kind
of
like
a
little
bit
of
jello
just
moved
around,
but
I
was
at
the
flare
station
at
in
October
of
89,
the
big
earthquake
right
and
the
energy
Trail.
Just
like
the
movies.
B
They
show
the
the
roads
like
this.
In
the
movies
it
actually
happens,
the
road
was
just.
It
was
literally
just
moving
like
a
wave
and
the
PG
e
Towers
they've
got
the
cables
back
there,
they
were
swaying
and
it
was
quiet
on
all
I
could
do.
All
I
could
hear
was
that
cable,
swaying
and
making
a
sound
in
and
so
Mark
I
was
out
here
with
bark
rogie
who
the
other
engineer
and
we
ran
away
from
all
of
that
ran
up
the
hill.
B
There
was
no
damage,
it
all
just
moved
nicely,
but
we
we
went
back
to
the
floor
station
and
got
it
running
again
and
then
we
went
into
town
and
saw
the
news
and
saw
whatever
happened.
What
happened
all
around
the
Bay
Area
but
Shoreline
was
fine.
B
J
C
A
So
I
I,
actually
it's
long,
Energy,
Road
behind
hole,
12.
I
know
what
you're
talking
about
I,
don't
actually
believe.
That's
part
of
the
landfill
system.
It's
part
of
other
infrastructure,
that's
tied
in
with
Intuit
and
in
that
area.
It's
right
on
the
border
of
where
the
landfill
ends,
and
so
it's
not
actually
part
of
the
landfill.
I
can't
tell
you
exactly
what
it's
tied
to,
but
I
know
exactly
the
one
that's
yeah
and
but
yeah
that
one's
not
part
of
the
the
the
landfill
system.
A
B
Because
the
city
is
not
allowed
to
vent
any
landfill
of
gas
into
the
atmosphere
so
that
map
that
showed
all
those
pipes
in
the
ground,
we
are
to
collect
it
and
not
let
any
event
in
the
atmosphere.
If
sometimes
there's
cracks
in
the
in
the
ground.
We
have
City
Crews
that
go
and
fill
those
cracks
and
maintain
it.
So
everything
stays
sealed
and
everything
all
that
gas
has
to
go
to
the
flare
station
and
be
burned.
So
that's
a
requirement.
If
there's
venting,
we
need
to
fix
it
and
that's
what
our
crews
do.
B
A
And
a
number
of
those
are
just
for
monitoring,
so
they're,
not
actually
like
part
of
the
gas
or
tied
into
anything
that
would
escape
and
then
yeah.
Some
of
them
are
actually
just
markers
as
well
as
to
let
us
know
that
something
is
down
there
and
then
lets
Vehicles
know,
don't
drive
over
it,
don't
park
on
it
and
that
sort
of
thing,
and
so.
B
B
So
outside
of
the
landfill
we've
got
groundwater
we've
got
Wells
into
the
groundwater
table
that
the
the
city
can
have
someone
go
out
and
collect
samples.
They
can
check
the
depth
the
height
of
that
water
table
and
Sample
the
water
and
make
sure
that
it's
not
getting
contaminated.
B
F
I'm
just
curious
like
what
kind
of
a
soil
like
underneath
the
new
the
Googles
like
a
campus
I
mean,
like
you
know
the
big
tent
thing,
like
you
know,
is
it
engineering
field
or
landfill
or.
B
Where
Google
has
built
their
structures,
that
is
not
landfill,
that
is
not
landfill,
it
is,
it
was
just
natural
ground
and
of
course
they
over
compacted
that
ground
before
they
started
construction,
but
there's
no
garbage
there.
L
This
has
been
such
a
brilliant
talk
in
the
black
oily
smelly
Gunk,
which
I
think
is
a
fantastic
description.
Is
there
anything
recognizable
at
all
in
it.
B
Actually,
yes,
there
have
been
now
not
in
those
samples,
because
there's
they're
they're
forcing
a
small
tube
down,
but
when
we
drill
a
hole
for
the
gas
extraction.
Well,
it's
a
much
larger.
It
could
be
a
24
inch
or
a
36
inch
boring
and
when
they
drill
down
to
they
have
to
take
out.
We
take
the
garbage
out
and
then
we
put
a
perforated
pipe
into
the
ground,
put
some
rock
gravel,
large
washed
gravel
up
to
a
point,
and
then
we
fill
the
rest
with
soil.
B
yeah
the
other
thing
about
when
they,
when
you
take
that
drill
rig
and
drill
down
through
there
are
a
number
of
times
and
numbers
of
times
where
we'd
have
to
stop
Drilling
and
pull
that
drill
bit
up
out
and
it
was
wrapped
with
wire
and
the
wire
was
from
somebody's
mattress,
the
Old
Spring,
the
old
Springs
in
a
mattress.
It's
they
just
throw
the
mattress
in
the
ground.
We
drill
through
it
and
all
those
Springs
would
be
wrapped
around
the
drill
bit.
L
B
B
It's
funny
that
in
this
parking
lot
part
of
the
parking
lot
in
front
of
this
building,
half
of
it
is
in
engineer,
fill
and
half
of
it
is
not.
And
if
you
go
stand
out,
there
look
stand
in
the
middle
aisle.
You
could
kind
of
see
where
that
line
is
it's
pretty
stable
on
one
side
and
it's
kind
of
sloping
on
the
other.
B
There's
a
project
in
the
future,
I'm
sure
there's
going
to
have
to
be
a
project
in
the
future
to
fix
that.
It's
just
what
you
do.
It's
it's
a
fact
of
life
out
here,
but
one
corner
of
that.
We
call
that
cell
9A
and
that
cell
I
was
told.
I
never
saw
this,
but
Mark
rogie.
The
person
who
actually
hired
me
to
work
for
the
city
said
he
was
here
and
a
Truck
came
out
to
landfill
and
a
bunch
of
bowling
balls
were
dumped
in
there.
B
M
C
B
You
have
to
understand
the
the
science
and
the
engineering,
but
you
sometimes
what
you
think
will
happen
it
just
physics,
just
don't
work
the
same
on
a
landfill,
so
there's
a
lot
of
studying
that
goes
on
into
managing
the
landfill,
but
I
think
it's
still.
The
future
is
civil
engineering,
Environmental,
those
types
of
backgrounds
or
what
you
need
to
work
in
this
environment
and
if
you're
going
to
work
at
Shoreline,
you
have
to
have
a
passion
for
the
environment
and
and
the
community
I
think.
B
I
love
this
picture.
I
had
to
stick
it
in
here.
It's
a
sensitive,
Wildlife,
Area
and
there's
a
Arbor
and
Ale,
but
it
is
not
the
only
thing.
That's
not
the
only
element.
You
know
environmentally.
That's
that's
out
here.
There's
a
a
lot
of
things
that
we
see
and
can't
say
out
here
and
I
would
say
that,
even
though
I
studied
kind
of
an
emphasis
of
Structural
Engineering
in
college,
I
became
an
environmentalist
working
at
a
shoreline
and
I
fell
in
love
with
these
guys.
B
It's
just
amazing
and
I
have
worked
on
projects
to
try
to
continue
to
build
homes.
For
these
guys
out
here,
one
of
the
first
things
I
got
to
do
in
1989,
CNN
at
the
time
was
doing.
You
may
remember
24-hour
Headline
News.
B
There
was
a
channel
that
you
could
turn
to
and
they
just
did
30
minutes
of
news
in
the
next
30
minutes.
They
kind
of
repeated
it
added
a
story
took
away
a
story,
but
they
did
that
24
7.
and
one
day
we
got
a
call
out
at
Shoreline.
They
said
CNN
wants
to
do
a
story
on
these
burrowing
owls
and
we
were
just
at
the
very
beginning
of
making
these
artificial
Mounds.
B
B
B
D
A
So
one
of
the
projects
going
on
out
there
right
now
is
Ray.
Can
you
go
back
to
the
map?
Actually
so
Pond,
Aid,
2
and
pond
A1?
So
right
now,
there's
a
project
called
South,
Bay,
Salt,
Pond
restoration,
that's
happening
around
the
entire
bay
in
different
sections
and
they're
bringing
in
dirt
and
basically
creating
a
habitat
transition
zone
from
where
it
says,
Bay
Trail
out
into
the
pond.
A
They
eventually
plan
to
break
the
Levee,
that's
out
there
and
actually
have
it
be
a
natural
tidal
flow,
and
so
that's
one
of
those
projects,
that's
adding
to
raising
the
levee,
but
also
rearranging
the
Levee
and
that's
Mountain
views
involved
heavily.
But
that's
not
our
our
project
quote
unquote,
it's
U.S
fish
and
wildlife,
and
so
there's
a
lot
happening
out
there.
So
when
you
see
a
lot
of
trucks
going
in
out
there,
it's
either
one
our
landfill
group
doing
work
on
the
landfill
getting
material
for
the
landfill
or
two.
A
They
are
using
that
pathway,
we're
trying
to
keep
them
off
of
Shoreline
Boulevard
to
do
their
workout
on
the
Bay
Trail
and
out
on
that
habitat
transition
zone.
And
so
that's
probably
what
you're
seeing
most
out
there.
B
You
know,
since
we
use
garbage
to
raise
it
and
to
to
create
the
the
foundation
of
the
park,
it
was
to
show
you
what
it
takes
to
maintain
that
I'm
wondering
you
know,
are
there
anybody
want
to
share.
You
know
any
highlights
of
what
you
learned,
or
even
what's
your
favorite
part
of
Shoreline,
that
you
want
to
share
anything.
That
was
something
you
didn't
know.
E
I
I
remember
coming
here
a
lot
when
my
kids
were
really
little
but
then
after
a
while
got
really
turned
off
with
the
with
all
the
geese
and
their
their
remains.
So
it's
good
to
know
that
the
geese
problem
has
has
lessened,
but
it
also
made
me
wonder:
just
you
know
adjacent
in
the
Palo
Alto
Baylands,
you
can
go
for
a
walk
and
sort
of
see
all
the
birds
and
things
like
that
with
I
was
just
wondering.
What's
the
plan
for
the
future,
especially
what
you
were
describing
turn
it
more
into
a
Title
Zone.
I
I
You
know,
as
will
our
side.
A
So
it's
a
tricky
question.
One
of
the
things
that
we
constantly
juggle
out
here
at
Shoreline
with
Wildlife
is
that
everybody
wants
to
see
wildlife
and
get
closer
to
it
and
the
more
humans
get
closer
to
Wildlife
the
more
we
disturb
them
and
discourage
them
from
being
around,
and
so
that's
one
of
those
ones
that
we
juggle,
and
so
there
are
talks
about
putting
in
observation
decks
or
something
like
that.
We
would
the
way
that
they're
going
to
be
working
on
the
ponds.
A
It's
not
really
going
to
turn
into
like
a
grassland
with
hard
ground
that
you
could
walk
on.
It'll
still
be
the
tides
coming
in
and
out
it
wouldn't
be
safe,
but
they
are
talking
about
doing
observation.
Decks.
We've
been
talking
about
potentially
putting
in
some
kind
of
trail
walks
along
the
Stevens
Creek
Trail
up
there
with
Stevens
Creek,
and
so
there
are
some
projects.
But
again
we
we're
trying
to
walk
that
delicate
line
of
we
all
want
to
see
the
wildlife,
but
we
don't
want
to
disturb
the
wildlife,
and
so
how
do
you?
A
How
do
you
walk
that
fine
line?
And
so
and
then
in
terms
of
Palo
Alto,
that
trail
is
planning
to
stay
there
right
along
the
Charleston
slew
that
nothing
will
happen
with
that.
It
won't
be
flooded
out
or
anything
from
these
other
projects,
and
so
the
existing
walkways
out
there
should
all
still
be
there
with
all
these
projects,
but
the
landscape
around
them
will
just
be
different.
The
types
of
habitat
that
are
there
will
be
different
and
so
but
yeah,
and
then
hopefully
we
get
an
observation
deck
or
two.
C
My
current
bicycle
commute
goes
up,
Stevens
Creek
and
then
goes
along
the
shore
to
Embarcadero
and
it's
the
thing
I
missed
most
in
the
pandemic.
I
was
working
from
home
and
I.
Couldn't
do
that,
unfortunately,
we're
moving.
What
was
surprised
so
the
work
is
moving
so
I'm
going
to
miss
it.
But
the
thing
I
learned
here
was
I
didn't
realize
the
landfill
was
part
of
the
plan
from
the
beginning,
I
thought
it
was
a
landfill
and
then
you
said,
oh,
let's
put
a
park
there.
B
H
Well,
you
asked
about
favorite
memories
here
and
so
I've
lost
my
dad
a
number
of
years
ago,
but
there
was
a
moment
here
at
Shoreline,
where
my
father
and
some
extended
family
myself,
my
sister
and
our
children
among
us,
sat
right
out
here
in
front
of
Michael's.
It's
a
fond
memory
of
me
with
my
dad
us,
the
kids.
H
G
When
a
lot
of
people
come
out
here,
you
know
I
mean
you
can
just
you
can
feel
the
sense
of
Mountain
View
Community
in
the
place,
and
then
but
I
would
ask
this
one
question
and
that's
that
I
noticed
that
if
I
mean
I
have
people
who
come
out
one
of
the
nice
things
about
living
in
California,
as
opposed
to
where
I
was
before
living
in
Texas,
is
that
people
will
come
out
and
visit
me
because
it's
a
nice
place
to
vacation,
you
know
Texas
is
is
too
hot.
G
You
know
for
a
lot
of
people
to
want
to
go,
see
it,
but
I
mean
I,
bring
them
out
here
to
Shoreline,
sometimes
in
July
and
August
and
there's
quite
a
pungent
smell
and
so
I
mean.
If
you
can
give
me
some
Clues,
maybe
when
to
avoid
bringing
them
out
here.
That
might
be
a
good
thing,
but
the
second
memory
I
want
to
share
is
just
about
rengstorf
house
I.
Think
it's
a
particularly
special
place.
G
I
mean
you
know,
I'm
serving
now,
as
vice
president
of
the
historical
Association
and
but
my
memories,
one
of
my
best
friends
got
married
there
and
I
think
it's
a
great
thing
that
they
rent
the
place
out
for
that,
because
that
helps
build
more
memories
and
more
use,
and
the
other
thing
is
around
the
holidays
when
they
have
the
Christmas
celebrations
and
caroling
and
stuff
out
there.
Friends
of
our
house,
I
mean
I
think
that
that's
just
a
special
holiday
time.
You
know
that
I
can
share
with
people
in
the
community.
So
you
can.
A
I
can't
give
you
a
great
time
to
come
out
here.
It
changes
every
year,
but
yeah.
One
of
the
interesting
things
is
that
as
much
as
Community
Services
loves
to
punt
the
smell
onto
Public
Works
in
the
landfill,
it's
India,
usually
the
landfill
at
all.
It's.
What
happens
is
with
our
creeks
and
since
we're
kind
of
Downstream
in
the
very
end,
we're
the
last
place
to
dry
out
here,
and
so
when
all
the
Creeks
dry
out
and
all
of
our
marshlands
start
to
dry
out.
A
That's
when
the
smell
kicks
up
and
it's
all
of
the
decaying
algae
and
the
other
plant
life
that
had
been
thriving
then
goes
and
then
comes
back
the
next
winter.
And
so
it
really
varies
depending
on
the
time
of
year,
the
weather,
when
it's
hot,
when
the
rain's
here
and
so
I,
can't
give
you
an
ideal
time
to
come
out
here.
But
that's
what
it
is.
It's
from
the
the
water
receding
and
coming
and
going.
K
I've
actually
found
that
low
tide
makes
a
difference
in
the
smell.
So
that's
something
you
could
look
at
the
title
tables,
perhaps
I
retired,
as
a
history,
teacher,
I,
love
history
and
when
I
did
that
I
wanted
to
become
a
dozen
in
a
castle.
However,
the
commute
was
a
little
bit
long.
Most
castles
are
in
England
or
France
or
somewhere.
So
I
looked
around
here
to
find
the
oldest
house
around
and
found
ringsdorf
house
at
Shoreline
in
Mountain
View,
so
I've
been
a
dozen
there
for
many
years,
13.
K
Something
like
that
and
the
thing
I've
learned
today
I
knew
this
was
on
landfill,
but
I
didn't
realize
the
parts
that
aren't
actually
on
landfill
and
parts
that
are-
and
that
was
a
revelation
to
me
today-.
N
Well,
I
learned
a
lot
today,
I
finally
understand
what
leachate
is
you
all
say
it
all.
The
time
never
knew
what
it
was
now
I
know:
I
have
lots
of
wonderful
memories,
about
Shoreline
I
love,
going
to
Vista
slope,
to
watch
things
like
eclipses
In,
The,
Blood,
Moons,
there's,
not
a
lot
of
there's
not
as
much
light
out
there
as
other
parts
of
town,
so
it's
a
great
viewing
spot.
A
lot
of
people
know
that,
however,
so
get
there
early
I
thoroughly
enjoyed
doing
the
pedal
boats
on
the
sailing
Lake.
N
That
was
a
blast
there
are
well
just
going
out
on.
The
trails
is
really
fun:
I
love,
Shoreline,
Amphitheater,
love
outdoor
music
and
it's
just
a
TR
like
you
said,
the
wildlife
is
always
fun
to
see.
This
is
like
a
gem
and
I'm,
so
thankful
people
before
all
of
us
had
the
foresight
to
do
this
and
I
appreciate
that
the
city
keeps
us
up
and
improves
it.
So
thank
you.
D
I
would
just
like
to
say
that
yeah,
the
wildlife
is
incredible
here
compared
to
other
parks
around
the
Bay
Area.
There's
really
something
special
here
and
somehow
your
talk
brought
home
from
me
and
you
look
out
this
window.
The
scale
of
engineering
was
just
amazing:
I
was
I.
Just
never
I
just
never
occurred
to
me
that
this
huge
area
was
all
essential.
Well,
you
said
not
man-made,
but
landfill
I
mean
the
hills.
You
see
here,
everything
I
just
can't
imagine
I
mean
it's
immense
engineering
project.
F
Thank
you
so
much
for
this
wonderful
presentation,
I
learned
a
lot
and
then,
like
she
said,
like
you
know,
I
never
knew
landfill
is
so
well
planned
and,
like
all
the
engineers
involved
and
I,
never
knew
that.
So,
like
you
know,
it
was
a
great
opportunity
to
get
know
about
it.
So
and
then
one
big
memory
I
have
about
this
Shoreline
Park
is
that
you
know
the
first
time
I
came
out
here
and
then
take
a
long
walk.
F
Was
the
day
I
had
a
long
interview
at
the
Netscape
Netscape
used
to
have
a
you
know
the
office
on
Charleston
so
like
after
the
you
know,
interview
I
came
out
to
chill
out
and
then
just
a
really
great.
You
know
Lake
and
then
like
in
the
wind
and
then
so
really
great
and
then
I
feel
so
good,
and
then
only
the
bad
thing
happened
was
like
you
know.
When
I
was
driving
out
on
the
shoreline.
You
know
those,
you
know
the
curvy
places.
F
There's
this
girl
came
out
and
then
they
can
just
you
know,
I
didn't
want
to
run
over
so
like
and
I
stopped
and
it
stopped
and
then
like
going
back
so
I
started
slowly
like
moving
and
he
came
back
and
then,
like
you
know
stuff.
Oh
my
God
I,
you
know,
I
made
a
run,
run
care
and
I
was
really
traumatic.
It
is
a
you
know,
only
the
kind
of
regret
I
had
but
I
like
Wildlife.
So
so
those
eyes
are
really
striking.
Memory,
I
have
and
I
have
a
confession.
Yeah.
B
B
I
was
thinking
about
becoming
a
draftsman
and
I
teach
her
I
won't
go
into.
It
was
a
longer
story,
but
I'll
keep
it
short.
Our
teacher
said
you
know
you
need
to
be
good
enough
to
translate
the
engineers
when
they
go
on
coffee
break
they'll
come
up
with
a
design
on
an
napkin
in
there
in
their
coffee
break
they'll,
bring
you
that
napkin
and
say
dry
it.
You
need
to
be
good
enough
to
draw
that
and
I
sat
there
and
went
I.
Think
I
want
to
be
the
engineer.
B
And
so
sure
enough,
over
the
years,
I've
had
to
go
through
old
files
on
Shoreline
from
the
70s
and
I'm
looking
through
files
and
folders
and
papers
I'm
pulling
out
pieces
of
paper
where
Engineers
were
doing
calculations
and
giving
direction
on
building
this
engineering,
Marvel
I
would
say
right.
They
they
literally
were
doing
it
on
sketches,
sometimes
and
enacting
it
that
same
day,.
O
I'd
like
to
thank
the
city
for
providing
this,
even
though
Asana
Sunday
morning,
I'm
the
president
of
the
historical
Association
and
was
asked
last
weekend
to
do
a
little
speech
up
and
we
went
up
to
Vista
slope
and
I
did
a
little
research,
Nick
Perry.
Our
past
president
wrote
a
nice
paper
about
the
development
of
Shoreline
Park,
but
what
and
I
did
a
little
bit
research
myself,
but
we
really
have
to
thank
our
forefathers,
our
city
council,
the
city
manager,
that
they
had
the
foresight
to
see
that
this
is
needed.
O
The
population
in
1950
of
Mountain
View
was
a
little
over
5
000
people
by
1960.
It
was
over
30,
000
people,
so
a
city
forefathers
said:
if
we
don't
act
on
this,
now
we're
going
to
lose
this
wonderful
opportunity.
It
was
considered
to
be
trashy
land,
but
people
said
you
know
we're
going
to
see
other
development
here
like
up
in
Foster
City.
So
I
really
think
we
need
to
recognize
that
we
had
some
very
smart
and
prescient
people
in
the
future.
I
could
see
what
could
happen
in
the
future.
O
Also,
when
I
was
doing
research,
this
I
came
across
an
article
currently
of
Rockland
the
city
of
Rockland
up
by
Sacramento,
and
it
was
an
article
about
what
they
want
to
do
with
their
landfill
and
in
the
article
the
city
of
Mountain
View
was
cited
as
one
of
the
best
examples
of
how
a
city
can
repurpose
its
former
landfill.
B
B
We
probably
all
understand
Wetlands
what
a
wetland
is
in
the
1960s.
They
would,
if
they
heard
the
word
climate
change,
they
wouldn't
know
what
you're
talking
about
even
Wetlands
to
a
certain
extent,
was
something
that
you
know
to
be
drained
right,
so
not
criticizing
them
at
the
time,
but
it
turns
out
some
of
the
area
out
here.
B
The
Army
Corps
came
out
and
said:
hey
Mountain,
View
you've
destroyed
some
wetlands
and
you're
going
to
need
to
do
something
about
it,
and
the
city
did
so
their
areas
out
here
that
are
considered
mitigation
for
that
destruction
of
wetlands
and
some
of
those
Wetlands
that
were
destroyed
or
where
the
saline
lake
is,
and
just
a
little
bit
north
of
where
it
says
Shoreline
Boulevard.
So
the
mitigation
is
part
of
it
is
here
and
the
Mountain
View
Title
Marsh,
so
that
was,
and
that
was
agreed
upon
with
the
Army
Corps.
B
B
G
When
it
comes
to
like
the
city
buying,
you
know
the
Crittenden
and
Vista
slope
I
mean
you
know,
were
they
thinking
about
buying
it?
You
know,
from
the
point
of
view
that
this
will
be
valuable
land
and
we're
going
to
want
to
rent
it
out
in
the
future,
or
did
they
have
some
other
idea
about
why
they
wanted
to
buy
the
land
at
that
time?.
B
Well,
so
actually,
the
Crittenden
site
was
already
a
landfill
by
being
operated
by
the
private
group
and
on
one
of
the
one
of
the
the
the
leachate
landfill
gas
master
plan.
The
name
that
showed
up
there
for
the
site
was
called
the
Ferrari
parcel.
The
Ferraris
were
owned
a
company
and
they
owned
land
here
and
their
Construction
Company,
and
they
had
bought
that
land
and
they
started
landfilling
there.
The
late
80s,
the
city
bought
the
landfill
from
them
and
landfilled
a
little
bit
for
a
few
more
years
and
then
stopped
it
that
landfilling.
B
So
the
idea
was
really
just
to
landfill
it
and
make
it
part
of
Shoreline.
The
Vista
slope
was
bought
in
on
purpose
for
landfilling
in
the
city
of
San,
Francisco
helped
the
city
to
purchase
this
property,
and
it
went
all
the
way
out
to
Charleston
Road,
and
we
referred
to
it
back
in
the
early
days
as
Farmers
field.
There
was
a
farm
that
was
here
at
the
time
and
since
that
time,
then
the
city
decided
to
lease
the
property.
So
this
is
all
underground
under
lease
same
thing
over
here
in
this
portion
and
I.
F
A
quick
question,
the
about
the
funding.
You
know
that
I
believe
like
energy
are
so
many
like
you
know,
things
has
to
be
funded
and
then
I
mean,
like
you
know,
it
requires
a
lot
of
resource.
Do
companies
like
Google,
you
know
kind
of
like
chip
in
any
of
these
and
diverse
or
like
in
just
a
county.
It's
only
counting
funded
projects
or
it's.
B
D
A
We're
very
fortunate
that
we
have
people
like
Ray
who
still
come
back
when
they're
retired,
to
help
us
out
here
and
give
us
their
knowledge,
and
so,
as
Ray
highlighted
the
next
one's
going
to
be
on
June
25th,
the
next
speaker
series,
our
third
one
is
expected
to
be
in
August,
we'll
be
making
announcements
soon
about
that.
So
we'll
be
sure
we
get
that
out
there
and
then
there's
a
flyer
out
there
on
the
table
with
information
for
the
June
25th
one.
A
We
also
still
have
the
photos
on
the
table
of
Michael's
being
built
and
what
the
Shoreline
Disneyland
layout
was
potentially
going
to
be
that
Ray
was
referencing,
and
so
with
that.
Thank
you
all
for
coming.
I
am
going
to
ask
that
if
you
do
want
to
stick
around
and
chat
that
you
stay
in
this
room,
there's
a
celebration
of
life
service
happening
next
door.
So
we
just
don't
want
a
bunch
of
congregation
in
the
hallway
right
outside
the
door,
but
you're
welcome
to
stay
here
for
a
little
bit.