Berkeley
& Oakland
BERKELEY
Berkeley
is a city on the east shore of San
Francisco Bay in Northern
California. Its neighbors to the south are the
cities of Oakland
and Emeryville.
To the north is the city of Albany
and the unincorporated
community of Kensington.
The eastern city limits coincide with the county line (bordering
Contra
Costa County) which generally follows the ridge
line of the Berkeley
Hills.
Berkeley is located in northern Alameda
County.
Berkeley
is the site of the University
of California, Berkeley, the oldest and most
prestigious campus of the University
of California system, and the Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, Lawrence
Hall of Science, Space
Sciences Laboratory, and Mathematical
Sciences Research Institute, which are on the
campus grounds.
Surrounding
the University
of California campus are the most densely
populated parts of the city. West of the campus is Downtown
Berkeley, the city's traditional commercial core;
home of the civic
center, the city's only public high
school, the busiest BART
station in Berkeley, as well as a major transfer
point for AC
Transit buses. South of the campus is the
Southside
neighborhood, mainly a student
ghetto, where much of the university's student
housing is located. The busiest stretch of
Telegraph
Avenue is in this neighborhood. North of the
campus is the quieter Northside
neighborhood, the location of the Graduate
Theological Union.
Further
from the university campus, the influence of the University quickly
becomes less visible. Most of Berkeley's neighborhoods are primarily
made up of detached houses, often with separate in-law
units in the rear, although larger apartment
buildings are also common in many neighborhoods.
Commercial
activities are concentrated along the major avenues and at important
intersections. In the southeastern corner of the city is the
Claremont
District, home to the Claremont
Hotel; and the Elmwood
District, with a small shopping area on College
Avenue. West of Elmwood is South
Berkeley, known for its weekend flea
market at the Ashby
BART station. West of (and including) San Pablo
Avenue, a major commercial corridor, is West
Berkeley, the historic commercial center of the
city, and the former unincorporated town of Ocean
View.
West Berkeley contains the remnants of
Berkeley's industrial area, much of which has been replaced by retail
and office uses, as well as residential live/work loft space, with
the decline of manufacturing in the United States.
OAKLAND
Founded
in 1852, Oakland is the eighth-largest city in California and the
county seat
of Alameda
County. Oakland is approximately 8 miles east of
San
Francisco and the cities are separated by San
Francisco Bay. The San
Francisco Bay Area is the sixth
most populous metropolitan
area in the United States. Based on United
States Census Bureau estimates for 2006, Oakland
is the 44th largest city in the United
States with a population of 397,067.
Rand
McNally named Oakland as having the best weather
in the United States. According to the 2000
U.S. census, Oakland and Long
Beach, California are the most ethnically diverse
cities in the United States, with over 150 languages spoken in
Oakland.
Attractions include Jack
London Square, the Oakland
Zoo, the Oakland
Museum of California, the Chabot
Space and Science Center, Lake
Merritt, the East
Bay Regional Park District ridge line parks and
preserves, and Chinatown.
The
city of Oakland stretches from the San Francisco Bay up into the East
Bay hills. The character of these neighborhoods continues to change
as waves of migrants from within the United
States and from other countries relocate here.
The changing economy has also lured more workers with information
technology and biotechnology skills to Oakland.
Oakland
has more than 50 distinct neighborhoods, many of which are not
"official" enough to be named on a map. The common large
neighborhood divisions in the city are Downtown
Oakland and its greater Central
Business District, East
Oakland, North
Oakland, and West
Oakland. East Oakland actually encompasses more
than half of Oakland's area, stretching from Lakeshore Drive on the
east shore of Lake
Merritt southeast to San
Leandro. North Oakland encompasses the
neighborhoods between downtown and Berkeley and Emeryville. West
Oakland is the area between downtown and the Bay, partially
surrounded by the Oakland
Point, and encompassing the Port
of Oakland.
Another
broad geographical distinction is between "the hills" and
"the flatlands" (or "flats"). The flatlands are
the historically working-class neighborhoods located relatively
closer to San Francisco Bay, and the hills are the more
upper-middle/upper-class neighborhoods along the northeast side of
the city which include the Montclair and Claremont Hills
neighborhoods. This hills/flats division is not only a characteristic
of the City of Oakland, but extends beyond Oakland's borders into
neighboring cities in the East Bay's urban core. Downtown and West
Oakland are located entirely in the flatlands, while North and East
Oakland incorporate lower hills and flatlands neighborhoods.