Alameda Naval Air Station

⚠ Superfund · Cleanup underway

For complete information on the closure of Alameda Naval Air Station, now known as Alameda Point, please visit the Navy's website. A short status update for each site is provided below. When multiple sites are grouped together, it indicates that those sites have been combined into one remedial Investigation/feasibility study and one Record of Decision.

Location

CityAlameda
CountyAlameda County
StateCalifornia
Coordinates37.78889, -122.33000

Contaminants of concern

Contaminated media

Cleanup timeline

  1. Initial Assessment Completed — 10/01/1987
  2. Proposed to the National Priorities List — 05/10/1999
  3. Finalized on the National Priorities List — 07/22/1999
  4. Remedial Investigation Started — 09/03/1998
  5. Remedy Selected — 09/21/2005
  6. Final Remedy Selected — 09/20/2023
  7. Remedial Action Started — 11/22/2007
  8. Construction Completed — Not Yet Achieved
  9. Deleted from National Priorities List — Not Yet Achieved
  10. Most Recent Five-Year Review — 09/29/2021

EPA references

Other Superfund sites in Alameda County

EPA-regulated facilities nearby

Understanding this Superfund site

Alameda Naval Air Station is a federal Superfund site in California. The Superfund program, created by Congress in 1980, addresses sites where hazardous substances have been released or threaten release into the environment. EPA scores potential sites using the Hazard Ranking System; those that score high enough are placed on the National Priorities List.

Current status: Cleanup underway. Active cleanup is underway, meaning EPA has approved a remediation plan and work is in progress. Cleanup timelines vary widely — some sites take decades depending on contamination depth, groundwater involvement, and funding availability.

EPA has identified 10 contaminants of concern at this site, including 1,1-dichloroethane, 1,1-dichloroethene, 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene. Contamination has been detected in groundwater, surface water, soil, sediment, solid waste, buildings/structures.

If you live near this site and have health concerns, your state health department can provide site-specific guidance. EPA maintains a community involvement program for most NPL sites, and site documents — including the Record of Decision, five-year reviews, and public health assessments — are typically available through EPA's Superfund site profile.