Located In: Lighthouse Point Park
Hours
Friday | 12–5PM |
Saturday | 12–5PM |
Sunday | 12–5PM |
Monday | 12–5PM |
Tuesday | Closed |
Wednesday | Closed |
Thursday | 12–5PM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 701 W Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 Phone: (831) 420-6289 Website: http://www.cityofsantacruz.com/government/city-departments/parks-recreation/facilities/surfing-museum
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Surfing Museum | City of Santa Cruz
The museum is housed inside the Mark Abbott Memorial Lighthouse on Lighthouse Point in Santa Cruz. We are establishing a funding base for ongoing staffing, …
Santa Cruz Surfing Museum – Wikipedia
The Santa Cruz Surfing Museum is a museum which was established in May 1986 to document the history of surfing. With collections dating back to the earliest …
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Review Summary
Tina Venner
Nice place with surf history, friendly staff, nice gift area.
David Martinez
Really cool museum if your into surfing and you can’t beat the location.
Steve Ramsey
Definitely worth checking out to round out a complete Santa Cruz experience.
Orang Biglari
Closed because of pandemic but it’s on a coastal beautiful trail with free parking and a marvelous vista point.
Santacruz Multimedia
Santa Cruz Surfing Museum displays a historical account of surfing and offers trinkets for sale all housed in a lighthouse. Its located in the west side of Santa Cruz and was opened on May 1986 to document the history of surfing. The lighthouse tops out at 39 feet tall. It collections dating back to the earliest years of surfing on mainland United States.
Ted Briggs
Went here and witnessed a hoard of aggressive locals surrounding a vehicle and threatening to kill a visitor over a parking spot that they clearly felt entitled to. The dispute ended with the locals screaming at tourists to go back to where they came from and the one visitor frantically escaping. I couldn’t stick around the museum itself because a vagabond who appeared to be on drugs played the drums–poorly–from inside his van, and I found that annoyingThe coast itself is beautiful but the atmosphere feels unsafe and there’s clearly some tensions going on where visitors aren’t welcome. the seaside walk is nice but this museum itself is small. It’s mostly just a point where a bunch of tourists who seemed lost and bored stared over a fence at a bunch of surfers in the water below.