Freedom Park at Burnham Navy Pier
Coming Soon!
The Port of San Diego and the USS Midway Museum are partnering to deliver the West Coast’s largest veterans park. When Freedom Park at Burnham Navy Pier opens in 2028, it will celebrate the region’s military history and tell the story of everyday heroes who have served our country and preserved our freedoms. Construction is underway!


Location & Design
Freedom Park will be a nearly 10-acre park that will extend from the west end of Navy Pier, around the Midway, to the Bob Hope Memorial. It will provide visitors with unique experiences on the waterfront with numerous public amenities, including a nature garden, memorials and monuments, play structures, seating and shading, and interpretive signage.

Transforming Navy Pier
About half of the park will include the transformation of Navy Pier, which is adjacent to the USS Midway Museum. Features of this new park space will include:
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A wide public promenade along north side of pier to connect the east and west ends with well-connected pathways and trails throughout the entire park with educational programming elements incorporated
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Signage to invite and welcome public to access the public park
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Shade structure, seating, and bike parking along promenade
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A low seat wall with turf mound for sitting, picnic and active use
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Plantings that emphasize California natives or plant species indigenous to the region, allowing for non-native, non-invasive shade trees
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Mobile play and seating elements
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Flagpole and activated seating at west end of pier
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Monuments:
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John Finn Memorial (San Diego native, first Medal of Honor recipient in WWII)
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Family Homecoming at west end of pier
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A public restroom/comfort station
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Creation of a mobile phone microsite (or similar) dedicated to the history of the pier, the Midway, and San Diego Bay; mobile application will also compliment interpretive signage incorporated into the park on the pier and the existing park space in the surrounding area
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A snack concessionaire to provide low-cost offerings
Click here to visit the USS Midway Museum’s Freedom Park Page
San Diego’s Front Porch

Project Timeline
- February 2023 - the California Coastal Commission voted unanimously to issue a Coastal Development Permit (CDP) to the Port and the Midway for the project. The CDP allows for demolition of the headhouse structure at the entrance to the pier, structural repairs/rehabilitation on and under the pier in the vicinity of the demolished headhouse, and then construction of the park.
- February 2024 - the Board of Port Commissioners approved a $7.4 million contract to AMG Demolition and Environmental Services, Inc. for demolition of the headhouse. Demolition began in spring 2024.
- August 2025 - the Board of Port Commissioners awarded an approximately $2.6 million contract to Condon-Johnson Associates to perform structural reinforcement of Navy Pier on the east end under the area where the headhouse was demolished. Work is anticipated to begin in fall 2025 and be completed by February 2026. Park construction will follow with the park anticipated to open in 2028.
Freedom Park will be in the North Embarcadero area of San Diego Bay, which is the Port’s most visible and public waterfront. It’s often considered San Diego’s “front porch.” Freedom Park will add to the various public amenities – public parks and plazas, restaurants, public art and more – the Port has delivered in the area in recent years:
- Lane Field Park, which is dedicated to and named after the field where the original Pacific Coast League Padres played from 1936-1957
- A widened public esplanade lined with lush jacaranda trees and the “Grand Hall” along West Broadway
- Portside Pier with first-rate views of San Diego Bay from public viewing areas and four Brigantine restaurants
- Carnitas Snack Shack
- BRIC – a lifestyle destination at Broadway and Pacific that includes the Intercontinental San Diego hotel and two Marriott hotels as well as restaurants and retail
- Iconic public art by internationally acclaimed artist Pae White (incorporated into the pavilions, café building, entertainment and information centers, and the public restroom building)

Memorandum of Understanding and Port Proclamation
After many years of collaboration among Port staff, the Midway, and California Coastal Commission staff, the Board of Port Commissioners authorized a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on April 12, 2022, memorializing the plan to convert Navy Pier into a park and each party’s commitments and how to split the cost to build the park. The project is currently estimated to cost about $65 million. The Port of San Diego has contributed $11.7 million via Port Economic Recovery Program funding made available through the American Rescue Plan Act for structural pile improvements. The Midway will contribute funds for the headhouse demo, pier reinforcement, and full park buildout. When the park opens, the Port and Midway will split ongoing maintenance costs.
On February 13, 2024, the Board of Port Commissioners approved a proclamation formally designating the park area of Tuna Harbor and Navy Pier, nearly 10 acres total, as Freedom Park upon completion of park construction on Navy Pier.
