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A rendering of the incoming Magical Bridge Pocket Park in North Fair Oaks. Courtesy Magical Bridge Foundation.

A $1.1 million Magical Bridge Pocket Park is set to break ground later this year in North Fair Oaks, funded by the San Mateo County Board of Supervisors and several major donors.

The funding will transform a vacant lot near 180 Buckingham Ave. into a 5,500-square-foot park designed for people with physical, cognitive, sensory and socioemotional differences,” a county press release stated. The park will include sensory-friendly quiet areas, as well as a net spinner, a swirl saucer, chimes, a bead spinner, a hideaway hut and a bench swing.  

A rendering of the incoming Magical Bridge Pocket Park in North Fair Oaks. Courtesy Magical Bridge Foundation.

“We are proud to support a project that will benefit so many families,” said Supervisor Lisa Gauthier, who led the county’s $400,000 investment, in a statement. “When public leadership and private philanthropy come together, we can create spaces that reflect our shared commitment to equity, accessibility, and opportunity for all.”

North Fair Oaks, an unincorporated area part of San Mateo County, has few designated green spaces and public parks. The closest park to the future Magical Bridge Pocket Park is about a 15-minute walk away.

Elisa Espinoza, the senior program officer for the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, said, “We believe thriving communities are built through investments in vibrant, community-driven spaces where everyone belongs.”

The project is a partnership between the Magical Bridge Foundation, which builds inclusive playgrounds and programs, and St. Francis Center, a nonprofit serving local residents.

A rendering of the incoming Magical Bridge Pocket Park in North Fair Oaks. Courtesy Magical Bridge Foundation.

The Pocket Park was funded by donations from local families and neighbors, along with a $250,000 donation from Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan, $100,000 from The Schmidt Family Foundation, and $100,000 from the Sequoia Healthcare District and Dignity Health Sequoia Hospital.

A section of the park will also honor the memory of Tess Rowell Weber, a St. Francis Center staff member, who embodied the inclusive spirit of the project, according to a press release from the county.

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Miranda de Moraes is a Brazilian-American So-Cal native, who earned her bachelor's at U.C. Santa Barbara and master's at Columbia Journalism School. She’s reported up and down the coast of California...

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