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<br /> <br />Residential <br />31,561 <br />Government <br />24 <br />Education <br />56 <br />Commercial <br />2,105 Religion <br />45 <br />Agriculture/ <br />Forestry <br />8 <br />Industrial <br />586 <br />2021 Multijurisdictional Local Hazard Mitigation Plan <br /> <br />Table 13-1. Exposed Population and Property in Sea-Level Rise Zones <br /> Aggregate sea-level rise <br />Zone <br />Population <br />Population Exposed 147,577 <br />% of Total Planning Area Population 19.09% <br />Property <br />Number of Buildings Exposed 34,385 <br />Value of Exposed Structures 29,877,430,719 <br />Value of Exposed Contents 25,528,820,493 <br />Total Exposed Property Value 55,406,251,212 <br />Total Exposed Value as % of Planning Area Total 28.87% <br /> <br /> Figure 13-2. Number of Structures within the Sea Level Rise Inundation Area by Occupancy Class <br /> <br /> <br />13.3.2 Critical Facilities <br />Vulnerable assets in the planning area along the Pacific Coast and San Francisco Bay include critical facilities <br />(police stations, hospitals, wastewater treatment plants, and schools), essential regional transportation networks <br />and infrastructure (Bay Area Rapid Transit, Caltrain, Highway 101, State Route 1), and regional natural and <br />recreational assets (Pacifica State Beach, the California Coastal Trail, and the Ravenswood Pond Complex) <br />(County of San Mateo, 2018). The breakdown of critical facilities exposure by sea level rise inundation zone and <br />facility type is shown in Figure 13-3. There are 157 critical facilities exposed to some degree to the aggregated sea <br />level rise inundation area. <br /> <br />13.3.3 Environment <br />All sea level rise inundation areas are exposed and vulnerable to impacts. Many of the sea-level rise inundation <br />areas include important environmental and natural resources, which are often important elements in nature based <br />sea-level rise and flooding strategies. <br /> <br /> <br />13-6