Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Menlo Park (/ ˈ m ɛ n l oʊ / MEN-loh) is a city at the eastern edge of San Mateo County in the San Francisco Bay Area of California, United States.It is bordered by San Francisco Bay on the north and east; East Palo Alto, Palo Alto, and Stanford to the south; and Atherton, North Fair Oaks, and Redwood City to the west.
The entrance to SLAC in Menlo Park. Founded in 1962 as the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, the facility is located on 172 ha (426 acres) of Stanford University-owned land on Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park, California, just west of the university's main campus. The main accelerator is 3.2 km (2 mi) long, making it the longest linear ...
Menlo Park station is a Caltrain station located in Menlo Park, California. The station was originally built in 1867 by the San Francisco and San Jose Railroad and acquired by the Southern Pacific Railroad .
Location City or town Description 1: Rock Magnetics Laboratory: Rock Magnetics Laboratory: 1994 (#94001647) May 5, 1999: 345 Middlefield Rd. Menlo Park: Originally designated a National Historic Landmark in 1994. Demolished in 1997.
Connecting El Camino Real and Interstate 280, the road provides easy access to Stanford University and the northwestern area of Silicon Valley.The road also runs southwest of Interstate 280 into a residential neighborhood of Woodside, California, but the private equity companies are concentrated to the east of the freeway on the main stretch of the road in Menlo Park.
Adobe walls dating to the construction of the Presideo in the 1790s were incorporated into the front wings of the building. [122] Pacific House: Monterey: 1847 Storehouse: Weapons storehouse built by the US Army following the Conquest of California. [123] This building is a California Historical Landmark (#354). [124] Old Whaling Station ...
Earlier this year the Menlo Park Diner was listed for sale at a price of $4 million.
The James C. Flood Mansion is a historic mansion at 1000 California Street, atop Nob Hill in San Francisco, California, USA.Now home of the Pacific-Union Club, it was built in 1886 as the townhouse for James C. Flood, a 19th-century silver baron.