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Built in 1964, the school became part of the San Bruno Park Elementary School District in July 2000. [4] In 2013, it was decided that Crestmoor Elementary School would be closed due to low attendance. [7] In 2018, it was decided that El Crystal and Rollingwood would close, due to financial difficulties being experienced by the district. [8]
Crestmoor High School opened in San Bruno, California in September 1962 to relieve congestion at Capuchino High School and Mills High School. It was the seventh high school to be built by the San Mateo Union High School District, based in San Mateo, California. Construction began in 1960 on a graded plateau in the Crestmoor district of San ...
Crescent Junior High School: Buena Park: 1979 demolished for housing [8] Crestmoor High School: San Bruno: 1980 Peninsula High School continuation school and a municipal courthouse Ellwood P. Cubberley High School: Palo Alto: 1979 Cubberley Community Center: Cypress Grove Charter High School for Arts and Sciences Carmel: 2006 [13] Excelsior ...
Highlands Christian School, a private school, is also located in San Bruno. Founded in 1966, Highlands Christian School is an interdenominational school, and offers preschool through college preparatory school instruction. San Bruno considered new annexations in the mid-1950s that would have extended the city limits to the Pacific Ocean.
In November 2018, CBS News listed Church of the Highlands as the tenth largest megachurch in the United States with about 22,184 weekly visitors. [8] In the "Outreach 100" listing for 2022, Church of the Highlands was ranked second with attendance of more than 60,000 each week; it was ranked first in the previous listing in 2018. [9]
San Bruno Hillsdale: 1955: 3115 Del Monte St: San Mateo Mills: 1958: 400 Murchison Dr: Millbrae Peninsula: 1980: 860 Hinckley Rd: Burlingame Relocated to Burlingame in 2021. Previously located on the former campus of Crestmoor High School (300 Piedmont Ave, San Bruno) San Mateo: 1902: 506 N. Delaware St: San Mateo Adult School 1917: 789 E ...
The park is dominated by San Bruno Mountain which is a 4 miles (6.4 km) ridge. The park provides habitat for several species of rare and endangered plants and butterflies, including the Mission blue butterfly. Trails to the summit afford views of San Francisco and the Bay Area. A view of San Francisco from the park
The mountain was named by Bruno de Heceta to honor his patron saint, [46] and Sierra de San Bruno appears on the land-map of Rancho Cañada de Guadalupe drawn by Jean Jacques Vioget (presently in the collections of the Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley) some time in the 1840s. [47]