Construction on the long-awaited Beyer Park in San Ysidro kicks off this week, with a goal of completing the eight-acre park by spring 2026, officials announced Tuesday.
Phase 1 of the project, slated for a 43-acre undeveloped site, is receiving funding through several sources, including Mayor Todd Gloria's Parks for All of Us initiative.
"Beyer Park will be the first new public park in San Ysidro in over 25 years and serves as an example of our commitment to providing every San Diegan with access to high-quality recreational spaces," Gloria said. "It's also an example of why partnerships matter, and I'm grateful to the California Statewide Park Development and Community Revitalization Program and funds secured by [Rep. Juan Vargas, D-San Diego], which together provided the millions of dollars in funding to make this vision a reality."
San Ysidro residents have waited decades for a park in the location, with an unimproved 6.78-acre site designated for future park development in a 1974 community plan. Both the 1990 and 2016 San Ysidro Community plans reiterated calls to build Beyer Park along East Beyer Boulevard.
Get top local stories in San Diego delivered to you every morning. Sign up for NBC San Diego's News Headlines newsletter.
“You’re going to have people from all over playing soccer, playing softball, playing baseball," said Alberto Perez, a neighbor who lives right across the street from where the park is being built. “It was about time. We’ve been here like I said, 38 years and better late than never.”
"Breyer Park serves as a shining example of what the City’s Department of Race & Equity (DRE) calls an 'equity opportunity'– a policy, programmatic, and/or budgetary decision designed to promote equitable outcomes. The Race & Equity team partners with all City departments to develop and sustain equity-driven strategies, including how to create, and provide inclusive access to, critical infrastructure like City parks. Breaking ground at Breyer Park reflects the necessary work of identifying disparities and strategically executing solutions for all San Diegans," said Helen Weldeghiorgis, Program Manager, Department of Race & Equity.
Local
When complete, the park will have a children's playground area, ball fields, picnic areas, restrooms, a dog park, a skate park, walking trails and public art, according to city documents.
Through San Diego's Commission for Arts and Culture, artists Ingram Ober and Marisol Rendón created an art piece for Beyer Park, titled "Air Sanctuary." The artwork consists of a "singular ironwood tree that will grow within a sculptural enclosure that relates visually to the growth of the tree and that also creates a charismatic space to contemplate the living processes of a tree," a city statement reads.
Visitors to the park will be able to watch the trees grow and change with the seasons.
Through Parks for All of Us, Beyer Park received $1 million from the Citywide Park Development Impact Fee in March 2024. The project also received an allocation of $2.5 million in Community Development Block Grant funding in fiscal year 2023, along with $8.5 million in funding from the state's Park Development and Community Revitalization Grant Program.
For Phase 2 of the project, the federal government in 2022 gave a $5 million grant from a program that aims to create more green space and outdoor recreation options in underserved areas.
The total project cost is around $22.4 million.
"Construction for the new Beyer Park has been a long time in coming and is exciting to see come to fruition," said Andy Field, director of the city's Parks and Recreation Department. "We thank our numerous partners, including the San Ysidro community, youth, numerous nonprofit organizations, and federal and state levels of government, in helping fund and build this much-needed park.
"It's important that all San Diegans have equitable access to park and recreation resources and this brings us one step closer to ensuring that more parks are available to more people across our city," he added.