Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach

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Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach is a United States Navy weapons and munitions loading, storage and maintenance facility located in Seal Beach, California with detachments in Concord, Fallbrook, and San Diego, all also in California. The Base Realignment and Closure Commission has recommended that the Inland portion of the Concord detachment be closed and the Tidal section of the detachment be transferred to the United States Army[1].

Loading munitions from the wharf
Loading munitions from the wharf

NWS Seal Beach occupies 5,256 acres (21 km²), has 230 buildings and 128 ammunition magazines providing 589,299 feet² (54,747 m²) of ammunition storage space. Ammunition is moved from storage to the docks on 56 miles (90 km) of railroad line and 80 miles (128 km) of road. The base owns 130 pieces of railroad rolling stock and 230 trucks and trailers to move the ammunition which is loaded onto ships using six mobile cranes that can lift up to 90 tons (81 tonnes).[2]

World War II Submarine Memorial
World War II Submarine Memorial

The Weapons Station is also home to the West Coast site of the World War II Submarine Memorial. The Memorial is dedicated to the over 3000 submariners who lost their lives in United States submarines in the 52 submarines lost during WWII. There are also plaques dedicated to those who lost their lives in submarine accidents during the Cold War. The Memorial is located outside the main entrance to the Weapons Station on Seal Beach Boulevard and is accessible to the public.[3]

The Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge is a 920 acre (4 km²) salt marsh located within the boundaries of the Weapons Station.[4]

Marsh wetlands of the Wildlife Refuge.
Marsh wetlands of the Wildlife Refuge.

An Installation Restoration (IR) project is underway at the base to clean up environmental hazards and restore damaged areas. Working with a Restoration Advisory Board made up of representatives from the surrounding community, a total of 73 sites needing attention were identified. Studies of the recommended sites were done and 46 were found to have no contamination and required no intervention. Five facilities were permitted and are still in use and were removed from the IR program. Responsibility for two underground tanks was transferred to other agencies with expertise in such tanks. Seven sites have had the cleanup process completed with 13 other sites in the process of analysis or cleanup as of September of 2005. The remaining 13 sites range from the station landfill to a paint locker to an explosives burning ground.[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^  Base Realignment and Closure Commission (2005). Attachment D-1. In DOD Base Closure and Realignment Report to the Commission — Department of the Navy Analyses and Recommendations, pp. D-7—D-8 (99-100).
  2. ^  Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach Facts. Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach. Retrieved on September 6, 2005.
  3. ^  Memorial Sites. Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach. Retrieved on September 6, 2005.
  4. ^  National Wildlife Refuge. Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach. Retrieved on September 6, 2005.
  5. ^  Installation Restoration Program Status. Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach. Retrieved on September 6, 2005.

[edit] External links