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  1. This district is one of the oldest in Oakland, growing up around the old Peralta estate (now a city park). It always had a concentration of Latino residents, businesses and institutions, and increased immigration, continuing into the 21st century, has added greater numbers in Fruitvale and throughout East Oakland.

  2. Oakland is a city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area in the U.S. state of California. It is the county seat and most populous city in Alameda County, with a population of 440,646 in 2020. [ 13 ] A major West Coast port, Oakland is the most populous city in the East Bay region, the third most populous city in the Bay Area, and ...

  3. Lake Merritt is home to much of the city’s recreation, and gives its name to the Lake Merritt Wild Fowl Sanctuary, the oldest sanctuary of its type in the United States, dating to 1870. Oakland is not only home to the magnificent lake, but also to many public performances given by the Oakland Symphony Orchestra and the Oakland Civic Ballet.

    • 1 | An Urban Village Emerges: The Kellersberger Survey and Grid
    • 2 | Civic Architecture and The City Beautiful Movement: The Robinson Plan
    • 4 | The Rise of The Automotive City: The Bartholomew Plan

    Oakland got its start as a cluster of development set among the oak trees near the mouth of the Oakland Estuary, along what is now the Oakland Inner Harbor. City founders Horace Carpentier, Edson Adams and Andrew Moon incorporated the area into a city in 1852, and they facilitated development by hiring Julius Kellersberger, a Swiss engineer, to lay...

    By the turn of the century, Oakland’s population had reached 67,000. Given technological changes in architecture, the skyscraper was suddenly possible and downtown Oakland became a significant site for major buildings. The next decade was Oakland’s fastest growth period ever. By 1910, the city’s population had more than doubled, to 150,000, and som...

    By the late 1920s, Oakland’s population was approaching 300,000 and planning became increasingly concerned with the rise of traffic congestion. Prior to the 1930s, downtown Oakland was the transit hub of a growing East Bay, where most people moved around on streetcars or on foot. As car ownership began to grow significantly in the 1920s, cities thr...

  4. Oct 7, 2024 · Oakland, city, seat (1873) of Alameda county, west-central California, U.S. It lies on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay opposite San Francisco. The city site is located on a flat coastal plain that rises toward hills to the east that parallel the shoreline. Oakland has a mild Mediterranean-type climate with warm sunny summers and cool ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Oakland is the largest city in the Eastern Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area in California. It covers 54 square miles, the third-largest in the Bay Area, and ranks eighth among the most populated cities in the state. Oakland is known for being the center of trade and transportation.

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  7. Mar 20, 2023 · 14th Street runs past City Hall Park (now Frank H. Ogawa Plaza), circa 1907. The Tribune Building base was constructed in 1906, but the tower that’s still an iconic part of Oakland’s skyline wasn’t built until 1923. Historical Photo Courtesy of the Oakland History Center. Photo by Saskia Hatvany. Jingletown and the docks

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