Capitola Wharf grand opening delayed until September

CAPITOLA — Those looking to celebrate the recovery of one of Capitola’s most prized possessions will have to wait a little longer.

The city announced Wednesday that its planned Wharf Grand Opening event, originally set for Aug. 14, has been rescheduled for a yet-to-be-determined date in September.

Chloé Woodmansee, an assistant to the city manager, wrote in an email to the Sentinel Wednesday that while repair and infrastructure work is still on pace to be finished in June, additional facility-based items such as new benches, trashcans, donor art and an upgraded entry gate are likely not to arrive or be fully installed by the original August celebration date.

RELATED: Capitola Wharf, wrecked in huge winter storms, set to reopen after $10 million upgrade

“Once we have confirmation of certain shipments and installations, we can confirm the event date,” wrote Woodmansee. “The City thought it best to hold the formal celebration once everything that will make the Wharf special for years to come has arrived and been installed for the public to enjoy.”

Woodmansee clarified that the city’s goal is still to have the wharf open to the public before August, though it may need to close during certain periods to finish various installations.

In advance of the grand relaunch, city planners have also been pursuing temporary use permits that will allow food, live music and other entertainment to be available to the public whenever the much-anticipated event occurs.

The 167-year-old structure was wrecked by brutalizing winter storms and a raging tide in early 2023 and it has been closed ever since. Not long after the historic storms rolled through, city officials began planning to incorporate the newly needed repairs into a previously existing project meant to improve the wharf’s public access and bolster its resiliency to future raging tides and heavy storms.

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The $10.6 million project includes replacement of all the decking and much of the railings, widening the wharf from 20 feet to 36 feet and the addition of 120 strong, fiberglass pilings that are more resilient to storms in an era of climate change.

This work was complemented by the Capitola Wharf Enhancement Project, a fundraising effort led by a volunteer group of community members that sought to bring in some extra cash through private donations that went to ancillary wharf facility improvements. According to the group’s website, it raised more than $350,000.

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