Beaconsfield Restoration Feasibility Study in Normandy Park
Project Description
- Located in the Nearshore Subwatershed on the Puget Sound shoreline in southern Normandy Park
- Project is part of project NS-11 in the 2005 Salmon Habitat Plan (page 7-118)
- Project to ascertain the feasibility of acquiring and restoring one of the last undeveloped, but bulkheaded, stretches of nearshore on the King County mainland
- Project was completed and led to:
- A second, design phase, which also received grant funding from the Salmon Recovery Funding Board in 2006
- A third, acquisition and restoration phase, which also received grant funding from the Salmon Recovery Funding Board in 2007
Partners and Funding
- Led by the City of Normandy Park in partnership with the Cascade Land Conservancy
- $50,873 funded by SRFB (sixth round) with the City of Normandy Park providing $6,000 and Cascade Land Conservancy providing $2,977
- Additional funding information
Importance for Salmon
- All species of ocean-going salmon use the nearshore for migration, and it is particularly critical for juvenile Chinook and chum for rearing, refuge from predators, and transition to saltwater habitats
- Beaconsfield-on-the-Sound has feeder bluffs that when reconnected to the beach (through removal of a bulkhead) will provide sediment needed to sustain the health of the beach
- The shoreline has overhanging vegetation that should be preserved and enhanced; a study has documented that young salmon rely heavily on terrestrial insects from marine riparian vegetation for their diet
More information on this SRFB grant application (Adobe Acrobat 841 KB)
Other Watershed Salmon Restoration/Protection Projects