San Juan Bay
| San Juan Bay | |
|---|---|
| Bahía de San Juan (Spanish) | |
Aerial view of San Juan Bay, 2009 Satellite view of San Juan Bay, 2016 | |
NOAA nautical chart of San Juan Bay, 2011 | |
| Location | Metropolitan area of San Juan, Puerto Rico |
| Coordinates | 18°27′7.95″N 66°6′51.04″W / 18.4522083°N 66.1141778°W |
| Type | bay, estuary, harbor |
| Ocean/sea sources | North Atlantic Ocean |
| Managing agency | Department of Natural and Environmental Resources, Puerto Rico Ports Authority |
| Salinity | 34.5 |
San Juan Bay (Spanish: Bahía de San Juan) is a semi-enclosed bay, estuary, and harbor connected to the North Atlantic Ocean in the northeastern coastal plain of Puerto Rico. Surrounded by the capital municipality of San Juan and adjacent municipalities in its metropolitan area, namely Guaynabo, Cataño, and Toa Baja, the bay is home to the Port of San Juan, the primary seaport in the archipelago and island. About 3.5 miles (5.6 km) in length and 0.55 to 2 miles (0.89 to 3.22 km) in width, it is the largest body of water of several interconnected lagoons, channels, rivers, and creeks in the San Juan Bay Estuary, which covers about 83 square miles (215 km2) of land and 14 square miles (36 km2) of water in the San Juan metropolitan area in northeastern Puerto Rico.
Named after John the Baptist, whose name explorer Christopher Columbus gave to the main island of Puerto Rico as San Juan Bautista (Saint John Baptist) upon its discovery during his second vovage in 1493, San Juan Bay was first discovered and explored by Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de León, who began the European colonization of the archipelago along its shorelines with the establishment of the abandoned city of Caparra, also called the Ciudad de Puerto Rico (City of Rich Port), in the Pueblo Viejo barrio of the Guaynabo municipality in 1508. Ponce de León oversaw the transfer of said city under the name of San Juan Bautista de Puerto Rico (Saint John Baptist of Rich Port), today the Old San Juan historic quarter, to the nearby San Juan Islet in the San Juan capital municipality in 1521.
The entrance to the bay is guarded by the El Morro fortress in Old San Juan and the El Cañuelo fort in Isla de Cabras in the Palo Seco barrio of the Toa Baja municipality.