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Berkeley, California, United States of America

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Map of Berkeley

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Berkeley is a city in the San Francisco Bay Area of northern California, in the United States. Its neighbor to the south is the city of Oakland, California. Its eastern border is formed by the Tilden Regional Park. Berkeley is located in Alameda County. Home to the University of California, Berkeley, the city is known for its leftist politics, eclectic mix of residents, nuclear research, and gourmet food.

Places

Berkeley is the site of the University of California, Berkeley, the flagship campus of the University of California, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Lawrence Hall of Science, Space Sciences Laboratory, and Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, which are on the campus grounds. Another well known educational institution in Berkeley is the Graduate Theological Union.

Image:Sather-Tower.jpg|thumbnail|The Campanile

Other notable places include:
  • The Campanile belltower (Sather Tower) in the University of California, Berkeley campus.
  • Telegraph Avenue, along with People's Park, known as a center for "hippie" activity during the 1960s-70s, marijuana, and now the several "old timers" left over from the age.
  • The critically acclaimed restaurant Chez Panisse, the birthplace of California cuisine.
  • The Claremont Resort.
  • Berkeley High School (the city's only public high school), is considered a Landmark.
  • The Berkeley Community Theater, a well known concert hall.
  • The bicycle-pedestrian bridge across I-80 at University Avenue, the first of a new generation of people-friendly transportation improvements that focus on access instead of cars.
  • The Berkeley Rose Garden.
Main streets include:
  • Shattuck Avenue, home to the downtown business district, and the Gourmet Ghetto to the north
  • Telegraph Avenue
  • University Avenue, including the Indian business districts
  • San Pablo Avenue, in West Berkeley
  • College Avenue, the main commerce area being in the Elmwood Neighborhood. It continues into the Rockridge District of Oakland, California
  • Martin Luther King Junior Way
  • Solano Avenue, in the Thousand Oaks neighborhood
  • 4th Street, with a relatively new retail area which tends towards more expensive specialty stores.

Berkeley History

The history of the city is inextricably linked to its university. According to the Centennial Record of the University of California, "In 1866...at Founders' Rock, a group of College of California men were watching two ships standing out to sea through the Golden Gate. One of them, Frederick Billings, was reminded of the lines of Bishop Berkeley, 'westward the course of empire takes its way,' and suggested that the town and college site be named for the eighteenth-century British philosopher and poet." In 1873, Governor Newton Booth declared Berkeley to be the "Athens of the West".

The University of California first operated in Berkeley in 1872. Much of Berkeley's economy, status, and reputation has long derived from its relationship with the institution. The Pacific School of Religion (PSR), was founded by Congregationalists in 1866 as an ecumenical theological school— the first graduate seminary west of the Mississippi, and one of the two largest religious schools in the world (the other is in Leuven, Belgium). As a result, Berkeley is reputed to have the most churches per capita of any city in the US.

The 1910 "First Church of Christ, Scientist", designed by Bernard Maybeck, is a mix of Craftsman, Gothic, and Romanesque styles. It is a National Historic Landmark.

Both city and university have long been famed as a center of activist politics and radical social ideas. Early in the twentieth century, West Berkeley became a center for Finnish immigrants, many of whom were Socialists, and who contributed to the growing labor movement in the 1920s and 30s. The Finnish Hall (Toveri Tupa) in the 1800 block of Tenth Street is a now-landmarked community meeting place built by these Finnish activists in 1908. In 1911, Berkeley had a Socialist mayor, J. Stitt Wilson. The movement for women's suffrage was strong in Berkeley. In 1911, when it became law, California became the sixth state in the US to allow women to vote. While surrounding Alameda County as a whole voted against the female right to vote, it won easily in Berkeley.

In the late 1920s several large women's organizations combined to form the Berkeley Women's City Club. Its beautiful Italianate building on Durant Avenue, designed by renowned Hearst Castle architect Julia Morgan and completed in 1930, is a California Historical Landmark and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Today Berkeley has one of the still relatively few female fire chiefs in the US, Deborah Pryor, an African-American.

The Free Speech Movement began on the Berkeley campus, arguing for free speech on campus, despite its ownership by the Regents. Many student demonstrations against the Vietnam War occurred there in the 1960s, which American news organizations dramatically televised.

Another notable series of events that helped to solidify this popular conception of Berkeley is the repeated takeover by populists of an open lot owned by the University of California. The University has long sought to build on the lot, but the populists have demanded that the lot remain undeveloped and open as a public park. Today this lot is called People's Park and 1960s era culture and spirit still lives on on Telegraph Avenue.

Due to the generally liberal to radical views of the Berkeley public, the city is sometimes mockingly referred to as the People's Republic of Berkeley (and have led some to deride it as "Berzerkley"). This reputation—along with its generally temperate weather, high rates of tourism, and large student population—have attracted large populations of transient people, many of whom are homeless. As a result of this large homeless population, and of the city's proximity to high-poverty areas in neighboring Oakland, California, crime rates per capita are often among the top in the state.

Berkeley's police department, under its first chief August Vollmer early in the 20th century, was the first in the US to require that officers have a college degree. This department developed the lie detector test, and was one of the first to use fingerprints and radios. In 1973, Berkeley's city council enacted its well known Berkeley Marijuana Initiative. The act ordered Berkeley police to make "no arrests and issue no citations for violations of marijuana laws."

In 1986 Berkeley officially became a Nuclear Free Zone after a local vote, disallowing the operation of nuclear reactors within city limits and preventing work from being done on nuclear weapons within its borders. While this can be seen as a logical extension of its radicalism, it also is an ironic play with Berkeley's past: the University of California, Berkeley played a major role in the development of nuclear weapons during World War II, a DOE National Laboratory (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) still sits in the expensive hill-side real estate above the city. The University of California, as of this writing, still has a contract with the U.S. government to manage LBNL, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (the latter of which designed all nuclear warheads in the U.S. arsenal, and still maintain the programs of stockpile stewardship). Street signs posted at the city borders declaring its Nuclear Free Zone status are the most noticeable effect of the measure. (The University also once housed a small research reactor which would have been in noncompliance with the Nuclear Free Berkeley Act. This was replaced in the 1990s with a computer laboratory, though the University denies that this had anything to do with the Act). Berkeley also celebrates "Indigenous People's Day" rather than "Columbus Day" in October.

In 1989, Berkeley banned the use of polystyrene packaging for keeping McDonald's hamburgers warm. This was one of the earliest events in the plastics recycling movement in the U.S.

The city of Berkeley is home to a number of well-known artists, architects, composers, writers and thinkers: Fritjof Capra, Susan Griffin, Christopher Alexander, John Adams, Rita Moreno, Michael Parenti, Michael Lerner, Michael Chabon, and others. The city also has more independent publishers per capita than any other city in the country, and more bookstores per capita. Additionally, many famous bands have originated in Berkeley, including Operation Ivy and Green Day.

More recently, Berkeley has become known as a gourmet food center. Even by the standards of the Bay Area it has an exceptional number of specialist food shops and restaurants, the Berkeley Bowl Supermarket, and a Berkeley restaurant, Chez Panisse, is regarded as the birthplace of California cuisine. Its proprietor, Alice Waters, has been called "the mother of American cooking." Among the shops, The Cheeseboard Collective is a well-known, cooperatively-run bakery and cheese shop.

Since the 1970s, the Bay Area Rapid Transit system (BART), a metro train system, has linked Berkeley to San Francisco and the other cities of the Bay Area. Berkeley has nevertheless maintained its own character. Originally the planners of BART proposed an above-ground route through Berkeley, but Berkeley residents voted for a tunnel route instead, whose extra cost was funded by a bond issue. Consequently, BART runs entirely in tunnel through Berkeley, but above ground in the neighboring city of Albany.

Berkeley is also serviced by the Berkeley Daily Planet, a free progressive daily newspaper which is a daily ritual for many residents on the throne. The Daily Californian serves the UCB campus and environs.

The City is also the birthplace of the nation's first Community Funded radio station. KPFA, still located in downtown Berkeley at 1929 Martin Luther King Blvd, was founded by pacifists in 1948. KPFA still broadcasts a strongly anti-war message and is now the flagship station of the Pacifica Network.

An unattributed quote about Berkeley reads, "Three things have come out of Berkeley: LSD, BSD, and the SCA. This is no coincidence." Its accuracy is questionable; LSD is better said to have come out of Switzerland, Harvard, and Stanford.

Interestingly, fewer people live in Berkeley today than did 55 years ago. Few other cities in the western United States can make this claim.

Population by decade:
  • 1890 - 5,101
  • 1900 - 13,214
  • 1910 - 40,434
  • 1920 - 56,036
  • 1930 - 82,109
  • 1940 - 85,547
  • 1950 - 113,805
  • 1960 - 111,268
  • 1970 - 116,716
  • 1980 - 103,328
  • 1990 - 102,724
  • 2000 - 102,743

Berkeley Geography

Berkeley is located at 37°52'18" North, 122°16'29" West (37.871775, -122.274603).

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 45.9 km² (17.7 mi²). 27.1 km² (10.5 mi²) of it is land and 18.8 km² (7.2 mi²) of it is water. The total area is 40.94% water.

Berkeley borders the cities of Albany, Oakland, and Emeryville and unincorporated Contra Costa County including Kensington as well as San Francisco Bay.

Berkeley Demographics

The city's population is culturally diverse, with a significant portion in transient residence attending UC Berkeley. As of the census of 2000, there are 102,743 people, 44,955 households, and 18,656 families residing in the city. The population density is 3,792.5/km² (9,823.3/mi²), one of the highest in California. There are 46,875 housing units at an average density of 1,730.3/km² (4,481.8/mi²). The racial makeup of the city is 59.17% White, 13.63% Black or African American, 0.45% Native American, 16.39% Asian, 0.14% Pacific Islander, 4.64% from other races, and 5.57% from two or more races. 9.73% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race.

There are 44,955 households out of which 17.8% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 28.9% are married couples living together, 9.5% have a female householder with no husband present, and 58.5% are non-families. 38.1% of all households are made up of individuals and 7.9% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average household size is 2.16 and the average family size is 2.84.

In the city the population is spread out with 14.1% under the age of 18, 21.6% from 18 to 24, 31.8% from 25 to 44, 22.3% from 45 to 64, and 10.2% who are 65 years of age or older. The median age is 32 years. For every 100 females there are 96.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there are 95.1 males.

The median income for a household in the city is $44,485, and the median income for a family is $70,434. Males have a median income of $50,789 versus $40,623 for females. The per capita income for the city is $30,477. 20.0% of the population and 8.3% of families are below the poverty line. Out of the total population, 13.4% of those under the age of 18 and 7.9% of those 65 and older are living below the poverty line.

Transportation

Berkeley is served by Amtrak, AC Transit, BART (Downtown Berkeley Station, North Berkeley, and Ashby Station) and bus shuttles operated by major employers including UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Labs. The only major freeway is Interstate 80. Each day there is an influx of thousands of cars into the city by commuting UC faculty, staff and students, making parking for more than a few hours an expensive proposition.

Berkeley has one of the highest rates of bicycle and pedestrian commuting in the nation. Berkeley is the safest city of its size for pedestrians and cyclists, a fact that new research is attributing to a safety in numbers effect.

Berkeley has modified its original grid roadway structure through use of diverters and barriers, moving most traffic out of neighborhoods and onto arterial streets (visitors often find this confusing, because the diverters are not shown on all maps). Berkeley maintains a separate grid of arterial streets for bicycles, called Bicycle Boulevards, with bike lanes and lower amounts of car traffic than the major streets to which they often run parallel.

Berkeley hosts a car sharing network run by City CarShare. Rather than owning (and parking) their own cars, members share a group of cars parked nearby. Online reservation systems keep track of hours and charges.

Mayors

City of Berkeley Mayor's Office
  • Tom Bates, Mayor of Berkeley (elected 2002), married to California State Assemblymember and former Berkeley Mayor Loni Hancock
  • Shirley Dean, mayor 1994-2002
  • Loni Hancock, mayor 1986-1994, currently representing California State Assembly District 14, the East Bay Area, married to Berkeley Mayor and former California State Assemblymember of District 14 Tom Bates

Notable Berkeley residents (past and present)

  • Ben Affleck - (actor)
  • Billie Joe Armstrong - (member of punk rock band Green Day)
  • Tim Armstrong - (member of punk rock bands Rancid and Operation Ivy)
  • David Brower - (Environmentalist)
  • Michael Chabon - (author)
  • Francis Ford Coppola - (filmmaker and vintner)
  • Robert Crumb - (cartoonist)
  • Adam Duritz - musician
  • Daniel Ellsberg - (military analyst)
  • John Fogerty - (singer/songwriter)
  • Matt Freeman - (member of punk rock bands Rancid and Operation Ivy)
  • Allen Ginsberg - (poet)
  • Whoopi Goldberg (actress and comedian)
  • Wavy Gravy - (activist and 1960s counterculture icon)
  • Davey Havok - (singer for AFI)
  • Patty Hearst - (Newspaper heiress and kidnap victim)
  • Gregory Hoblit - (film and television director)
  • David Horowitz - (1960s radical turned conservative activist)
  • Ishi, last of the Yahi - "Stone Age" Native American
  • Theodore Kaczynski - (Unabomber)
  • Phil Lesh - (former Grateful Dead bassist)
  • George Lucas - (filmmaker)
  • Country Joe McDonald - Singer/Songwriter
  • Huey P. Newton - (Black Panther Party)
  • Robert Oppenheimer - (directed construction of nuclear bomb)
  • Mario Savio - (1960s Free Speech Movement icon)
  • Edward Teller - (nuclear physicist, thermonuclear weapons)
  • Lars Ullrich - (Metallica drummer)
  • Alice Waters -(restaurateur)
  • Saul Zaentz - (film producer)
  • Pete Wilson - (former governor of California)
  • Norman Mineta - (Transportation Secretary under US President George W. Bush)
  • Gordon Moore - (co-founder of Intel)
See also these lists of notable people associated with the University, most of whom probably didn't commute.
  • List of Nobel laureates associated with UC Berkeley
  • List of UC Berkeley faculty
  • List of UC Berkeley alumni

Points of interest

  • Berkeley Community Theatre
  • Berkeley Repertory Theatre
  • Chez Panisse
  • Cloyne Court Hotel, a member of the University Students' Cooperative Association
  • Fantasy Records
  • Hearst Greek Theatre
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Regional Parks Botanic Garden
  • University of California, Berkeley
  • University of California Botanical Garden
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