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In 1974, the government of San Jose instituted the Rincon de los Esteros Redevelopment Plan, to develop the Rincon de los Esteros district into a major tech hub for Silicon Valley. [15] In 1998, the city established a specific plan for Rincon South, which has since been a separate neighborhood from the rest of Rincon. [16] [17] [18]
Bernal Road — named after Ygnacio Bernal's 400 acres of fruit and vegetable farmland in southeast San Jose. Berryessa Road — named after San Jose pioneer Nicholas Berryessa and his descendants. Bird Avenue — named after Isaac and Calvert Bird, who lived in the area.
North San Jose is made up of numerous neighborhoods grouped into three districts: Alviso, Berryessa, and Rincon / Golden Triangle. North San Jose is bordered by the San Francisco Bay and Milpitas to the north, the Diablo Range to the east, Santa Clara and Sunnyvale to the west, and bound in the south by the Bayshore Freeway (US-101), Nimitz ...
An aerial view of California State Route 237, Sunnyvale, looking east, taken from above a parking garage on the north side of the road California State Route 237, San Jose, looking east from above Santa Clara. Route 237 begins at a junction of Grant Road with El Camino Real (SR 82) in Mountain View, as a four lane divided highway.
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San Jose: 0.00 [a] US 101 (Bayshore Freeway) – Los Angeles, San Francisco: Interchange; west end of SR 130; US 101 exit 386A; road continues as Santa Clara Street: 1.35 [a] I-680 (Sinclair Freeway) – Sacramento, San Jose: Interchange; I-680 exit 2A [a] West end of state maintenance at the San Jose city limit: Lick Observatory: 22.50
State Route 87 (SR 87), known as the Guadalupe Freeway or referred to by the locals as Highway 87, is a north–south state highway in San Jose, California, United States. Before being upgraded to a freeway, it was Guadalupe Parkway (and some signs still refer to it that way).
William Byas Gibson (1831–1906), originally from Virginia, moved from Missouri to California in 1850 with other "overlanders" seeking fortune in California's gold laden hills. He travelled via covered wagon and settled on Cache Creek in 1850, where he built a modest home.