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Alcatraz considering sleepovers

By: John Upton
Examiner Staff Writer
July 6, 2009

Lock down: The Barracks Building on Alcatraz Island, which used to house prison guards and their families, is scheduled to be rehabilitated to allow visitors to stay overnight. (John Upton/The Examiner)

SAN FRANCISCO — The weather-worn doors to former guards’ barracks on Alcatraz Island could be swung open to allow visitors to sleep overnight at the world-famous outcrop.

But delicate or aging tourists might be disappointed. In keeping with the island’s rugged past, overnight visitors will need to sweat for their board through physical labor to help spruce up the famous landmark, under recommendations being drafted by officials.

Last year, the federal agency that oversees Alcatraz solicited public feedback on the island’s future. The task was part of an effort to create a 20-year master plan for the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, which includes Alcatraz Island and some other Bay Area coastal regions.

The GGNRA outlined three alternatives for the future of the island, which is a popular tourist destination that was formerly home to a military fortress, a maximum-security penitentiary and a Native American settlement.

The alternatives raised the prospect that hotel or hostel accommodations might open on the island, as first reported by The Examiner.

They included increasing visitor access to the island, preserving and enhancing its natural environment, and restoring and celebrating its “national treasures” — features relating to Alcatraz’s checkered cultural past.

More than 1,500 people and organizations submitted feedback, according to GGNRA project manager Brian Aviles.

“We’ve selected the preferred alternative,” Aviles said. “It’s going to be alternative number three —‘Focusing on National Treasures.’”

No new buildings are planned on the island, but aging buildings will be refurbished and some ecological restoration will be undertaken, he said.

“We want to focus the accommodations on providing a better place for our volunteer and educational programs — so it’s going to be modest in scale, and it’s going to be dorm-like,” Aviles said.

The dormitories will be built in future years into the cold, gray Barracks Building, which is the island’s largest building and the first structure visitors encounter when they reach the island by ferry.

“That was historically a barracks, and we think we can reconfigure it. We’re not going to restore all of it — it’s a five story building — but portions of it would be opened up to the public,” Aviles said.

The recommendations are due to be finalized next year, and it’s too early to say how many beds or rooms will open, but Aviles said he imagined dorm rooms containing 20 beds each.

A small fee might need to be paid by volunteer workers staying on the island.

Many older tourists on the island Sunday turned up their noses at the prospect of sleeping in the Barracks Building — especially if labor was required.

But younger visitors sounded enthusiastic.

“I would definitely be interested,” said Alex Cordery, a 15-year-old Englishman vacationing with pals in California. “It’d be good to be able to say that you stayed at Alcatraz.”

The duties of the island’s newest inhabitants will be based loosely on an existing program, in which nonprofits enter a lottery to send groups to the island, where they sleep on cots in prison hallways and garden and paint during the day.

Access to those programs is severely limited because the island lacks basic amenities like running water. The GGNRA is considering undertaking rainwater harvesting and water recycling initiatives on site, as well as building an underwater cable to import power from the mainland and installing solar panels on the island, according to Aviles.

Residents of the Rock

A history of the Barracks Building on Alcatraz Island

1860s: Construction of the Barracks Building begins. The building is designed to provide a “bombproof” fortress to help protect San Francisco from Confederate forces and sympathizers.

1890s: The Barracks Building is used to house a growing number of guards brought onto the island to oversee soldier prisoners who were punished for committing crimes during the Spanish-American War.

1930s: After the island was turned into a federal penitentiary in 1934, military living quarters inside the building were carved up to provide apartment housing for guards and their families.

1969-1979: Hundreds of Native American activists, who claimed ownership of the island, lived inside the Barracks Building.

Present: The building houses a tourist gift shop, theater and historical artifacts, but most of it is locked up for safety reasons.

Source: Cultural Resources and Museum Management Division, Golden Gate National Recreation Area

jupton@sfexaminer.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Frank

Jul 6, 2009

Why should Dubai and Kuala Lampur, Shgnhai and Peking be the on the tope of tourist attraction sfor Americans? Why not tear down the old delapidated prison and build huge Hotel-Casino complex, instead? Sell stock shares to finance and build the place with the stipulation that no one person can buy more than 20.000 shares or hold a majority interest! Sell one share up to 20.000 per person! E Pluribus Unum!

 

Ernest

Jul 6, 2009

Note to Frank: Educate yourself, dude. Alcatraz already IS one of the most visited places on the planet precisely because it is so unique (not to mention being part of a National Park). It is part of our heritage and is to remain intact, for all generations to enjoy, forever. You can go anywhere to gamble but only one place to see the cell of the Bird Man or Al Capone - Alcatraz.

 

Phil

Jul 6, 2009

I agree with Frank! Alcatraz Hotel Casino would be THE premier casino in the world. In a budget strapped city that is cutting such basics as fire and police, I think it should be considered. Ernest, we'll preserve Al and Bird Man's cell just off the lobby. A casino would make BILLIONS for SF. That is with a B. Look at what ONE casion did for New Orleans.

 


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