San Diego Is Getting One of the Most Ambitious Military Museums in America

Contemporary angular building with a glass façade, as people walk and gather in a sunny plaza in front of it.

San Diego has always had a deep, unspoken bond with the U.S. Navy. The city is home to one of the largest military concentrations in the country, and just across the bay in Coronado, every Navy SEAL is forged. So when the Navy SEAL Museum San Diego opened its doors on October 4, 2025, at 1001 Kettner Blvd, steps from the Embarcadero, it felt less like a ribbon cutting and more like a homecoming. But that was just the beginning.

In April 2026, the Port of San Diego Board of Commissioners voted unanimously to advance an environmental review for a far more ambitious vision: a striking, $256 million, four-story, 85,000-square-foot flagship museum at 1220 Pacific Highway, positioned at the northern edge of Lane Field Park along Harbor Drive. The vote was unanimous, and the enthusiasm in the room was hard to miss. “I predict that this is going to be the No. 1 museum in San Diego,” said Commissioner Frank Urtasun. “That design that you came up with is unbelievable. I love it.”

Designer: ZGF Architects

Modern waterfront complex with an angular dark-blue building, glass office tower with a yellow column, palm trees, and ships in the harbor.

The design, by US-based ZGF Architects, is nothing short of striking. The structure draws direct inspiration from stealth watercraft used by maritime special forces, with angular massing and faceted metal surfaces that give it the appearance of a futuristic ship cutting through open water. Perforated metallic panels will filter natural light into the interior, where immersive, technology-forward exhibits designed by Gallagher & Associates will bring the history of the SEALs to life across seven distinct galleries.

The proposed museum would also include a 2,500-square-foot theater, virtual reality environments, a youth education space, a café, retail, an event terrace overlooking San Diego Bay, and a new 150-foot public park that would complete Lane Field Park along Harbor Drive. The project is being developed in partnership with Hensel Phelps, which will oversee design, entitlement, construction, and completion.

The museum is part of the nonprofit UDT-SEAL Museum Association, the same organization behind the original Navy SEAL Museum in Fort Pierce, Florida, which has been operating since 1985. San Diego’s location was chosen deliberately, sitting just across the bay from Naval Special Warfare Command in Coronado, where all Navy SEALs train. The city draws more than 30 million visitors annually, placing it alongside cultural neighbors like the USS Midway Museum and the Maritime Museum of San Diego.

The California Environmental Quality Act review is expected to take roughly a year and a half before construction timelines are confirmed. But the direction is clear. San Diego is building something that honors the past and commands the waterfront for generations to come.