Project Description
The Lower Colorado River Authority constructed a 5 ft. x 1500 ft., American with Disabilities Act-accessible trail in Matagorda Bay Nature Park.
The Lower Colorado River Authority constructed a 5 ft. x 1500 ft., American with Disabilities Act-accessible trail in Matagorda Bay Nature Park.
The City of Port Lavaca replaced approximately 500 feet of handrails, 100 feet of deck planks, and 100 feet of cross braces on the fishing pier.
The City of Port Arthur constructed an additional 184 feet of boardwalk and a 70-foot pedestrian access bridge to the clock tower/elevator.
The Center for Progressive Studies and Culture, Inc. performed sediment collection and analysis for zinc in Nueces Bay and the Inner Harbor.
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department provided support to Texas A&M University - Galveston to help complete the Oyster Reef and Anthropogenic Impact Mapping of Lavaca Bay.
Save Cedar Bayou, Inc. completed preliminary engineering, environmental assessment, and permitting to restore the historic hydraulic connection between the Gulf of Mexico and Mesquite, San Antonio, and Aransas Bays.
The City of Rockport restored and modernized the 12-year old Rockport Beach Park Bathhouse, and enhanced the aesthetics of the park.
The City of Port Lavaca demolished and replaced approximately 500 linear feet of handrails on both sides of the pier and removed and replaced the most seriously deteriorated decking and cross members.
Texas A&M University at Galveston ground-truthed the maps that delineate oyster reefs on the Copano Bay bottom, finished the remaining surveying of the bay, and processed geophysical data.