The
Richmond–San Rafael Ferry Company, incorporated in 1913, began running auto ferries across
San Pablo Bay on May 1, 1915. The vessels connected
Castro Point in Richmond to
San Quentin Point in Marin County. The ferries ran continuously until the night of August 31, 1956, shutting down just as the new bridge opened.
Early proposals Proposals for a fixed bay crossing emerged in the 1920s, well before the Golden Gate Bridge opened. In 1927, Roy O. Long applied for a franchise to construct a private steel suspension bridge spanning from Point Orient to McNear's Point, estimating the cost at . Charles Van Damme, representing the ferry company, quickly countered with a competing proposal carrying an identical price tag. His version mapped a route from Castro Point to Point San Quentin, the alignment the state would eventually use decades later. Long won the initial franchise in February 1928, prompting Van Damme to petition the decision. The rivals opted to merge their interests that September. Oscar Klatt took over the combined project and managed to secure a War Department construction permit by 1930. However, the Great Depression halted the project's funding. The plans lay dormant for nearly ten years, seeing only brief flickers of revived interest in 1939 and 1947 before state-led efforts finally took over.
Tomasini's San Francisco–Alameda–Marin crossings T.A. Tomasini submitted a third proposal in late 1927, one far more ambitious than either prior plan. He initially envisioned a combined rail-and-automobile bridge running over five miles from San Pedro Hill to San Pablo. A year later, he revised the route to stretch from
Albany to
Tiburon. The Albany–Tiburon bridge would have been the longest of the early proposals, using a high-level western section with 1,000-foot navigation spans that transitioned into a low-level eastern causeway. Shipping interests immediately pushed back, arguing that the navigation spans were dangerously narrow. (2), and 1936 San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge (3) . Tomasini continued to scale up his vision. He proposed an additional bridge across
Richardson Bay linking
Sausalito to
Belvedere, and drew up plans for a massive bridge-and-tunnel system tying San Francisco to the Albany-Tiburon span via Goat Island. He estimated the total cost for the three interconnected structures at . San Francisco supervisors ultimately rejected the tunnel connection. Tomasini brought on prominent engineer
Ralph Modjeski as a consultant and managed to secure War Department approval for the $35 million Albany-Tiburon segment in 1932. He filed numerous extensions over the next decade to keep the project alive but repeatedly failed to secure bond funding. He lost the franchise rights in October 1941, though he continued promoting variations of the plan as late as 1948.
Construction: 1953–1957 In 1949, Marin County and the City of Richmond commissioned a preliminary engineering report from Earl and Wright of San Francisco, officially concluding that bridging the corridor was feasible. A state-funded follow-up study in 1950 determined the project could proceed under the California Toll Bridge Authority Act. The lower deck was completed and opened on August 20, 1957, bringing the bridge up to three lanes in each direction. Its completion marked the last time a Bay Area bridge replaced an existing ferry service. The only auto ferry left operating on the bay was the
Benicia–Martinez Ferry in the Carquinez Strait, which a new bridge replaced in 1962. ==Description==