CA, US & World
Saving Oceanside’s Sand: City Bets on 'Living Speed Bumps' Artificial Reef to Restore Disappearing Shoreline
OCEANSIDE, CA — For decades, Oceanside has been a premier destination for millions of tourists, but the city’s most famous asset is vanishing. In many areas, the soft sand that once defined the North County coastline has been replaced by jagged rocks and crashing surf that hits the seawall directly.
"What you see behind me here is our lack of a beach," said Robert Ashton, CEO of Save Oceanside Sand. Ashton, a resident since 1961, has watched the slow-motion disappearance of the shoreline. "We've been losing our beach over decades, and the city's really done nothing about it until recently."
Why the Sand is Gone
The crisis is the result of decades of "urbanizing" the shoreline. According to coastal experts, the construction of harbor structures and the damming of local rivers have cut off the natural supply of sand that traditionally replenished the coast through the decomposition of cliffs. While the city dredges the harbor annually—a process currently underway through May 9, 2026—the sand often washes away almost as quickly as it is placed.
The "Living Speed Bumps" Solution
To break the cycle, the city has selected a winning design from an international competition: the "Living Speed Bumps" pilot project.
Unlike traditional groins or sea walls that block sediment transport, this "hybrid" approach aims to slow and guide it. The project features:
An Artificial Reef: A butterfly-shaped structure sitting roughly 900 feet offshore between Tyson Street and Wisconsin Avenue.
Artificial Headlands: Two compact, rounded structures on the beach that work in tandem with the reef.
The Wave Pool Effect: Together, these features create a "salient"—a localized area of calm water that encourages sand to deposit and stay on the shore longer.
Tested for the Long Haul
The design isn't just a theory. A $1/35$ scale model of the Oceanside coastline has been undergoing rigorous testing at Oregon State University’s O.H. Hinsdale Wave Research Laboratory. Engineers have run thousands of wave cycles to observe how the structure performs under various tidal and storm conditions.
"The community wants their beach back, and not only temporarily through just dredging," Ashton noted. "They want it back for the long haul for generations to come."
A final report from the Oregon State team is expected in June 2026. If the city secures the necessary permits and funding—which already includes over $4 million in state and federal study grants—the project could be "shovel-ready" by the fall of 2027.
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By: CNN Newsource
May 5, 2026


