Community Corner

Mt. Um Keeps Its Radar Tower

The Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District votes "to keep the Cube" on Mt. Umunhum, and give staff and supporters five years build partnerships to raise money.

 

The Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District voted unanimously to keep the Cold War-era radar tower standing on the top of Mount Umunhum Wednesday night, an action that even its chairman thought he would not vote for last July.

“I’ve come around from ‘Tear the thing down,’ to ‘No … Let’s do it right. Let’s bring in partners,” said Curt Riffle, board chairman, representing Los Altos and Mountain View residents.

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“This is a very major decision that I didn’t think would have been done two months ago.”

The vote, taken in the historic Del Monte building in Sunnyvale, culminated a two-an-a-half year effort to begin opening up the 44-acre former Air Force station on the mountain top that the district purchased in 1986 from the federal government.

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“We succeeded in saving it,” said a relieved Basim Jaber, who had helped marshal supporters—from the veterans who had served there, watching the air space for possible hostile incursion, to the legions of residents who had regarded “The Cube” as a comforting landmark that signified home.

The $414,000 option approved Wednesday is an interim measure for five years, allowing the staff to take steps to retain and seal the building, while developing partnerships with outside groups to do everything from raising money for structural and interpretive work, to the many things related to historical preservation that the open space district was never set up to do.

“We don’t do buildings,” Riffle said, asking the 150-plus people in the audience to contemplate the open space district’s mission that was projected large on a screen. “We run away from buildings.”

And it was evident there are members of the broader community who are willing to help.

Such as the Kitty Monahan of the New Almaden Quicksilver Park Association, who said her organization helped develop Quicksilver Park and Casa Grande. “Our organizationss are ready to put our bodies where our mouths are, “ she said

And so did Mike Boullan of Friends of Alamitos Watershed, who was already laying plans to meet with ofhers.

Ronald Horii of San Jose recounted how he was struck by the similarities between the radar tower on Mt. Um, and the historic Fort Point in San Francisco. Built in the 1850s to guard the mouth of the Golden Gate from intruders, Fort Point was abandoned and vandalized by the 1930s. It was scheduled for demolition to make way for the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge, Hori said.

“But chief bridge engineer Joseph Strauss recognized the architectural value of the fort and had an arch designed in the bridge to protect it. Fast forward several decades: After years of lobbying it was declared a National Historic Site in 1970, over 30 years after it was saved from demolition, Horii said.

“Imagine if Joseph Strauss had said ’My job is bridge-building, not preservation?’” Horii asked.

 

Patch will have a fuller report on MROSD's decision, later Thursday.


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