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Eastshore Park — 4.47 acres (18,100 m 2) — 550 El Embarcadero & Lakeshore Ave, Oakland, CA 94610; Elmhurst Park — 1800 98th Avenue, Oakland, CA 94603; Elmhurst Plaza Park — 2.01 acres (8,100 m 2) — 9700 C Street, Oakland, CA 94603; Estuary Channel Park — 7.03 acres (28,400 m 2) — 5 Embarcadero, Oakland, CA 94606
A small boatyard operated at the site from 1935 to 1940. The shipyard was located at 321 Embarcadero Oakland on the San Francisco Bay, Inner Oakland Harbor. Crowley Maritime Corporation was the parent corporation of Pacific Dry Dock, which used the shipyard to repair its fleet of tugboats and other ships.
Pacific Dry Dock and Repair Company operated two shipyards in Oakland, California. Crowley Maritime used the shipyards to repair its fleet of tugboats and other ships. Pacific Dry Dock and Repair Company site 1, this was located at 1414 Embarcadero Oakland, across from Coast Guard Island till 1991. 37°47′01″N 122°14′40″W / 37. ...
The original system was completed in September 1974 when the underwater Transbay Tube and West Oakland opened. BART's three routes then were the Orange, Yellow, and Green lines. Embarcadero opened as an infill station in 1976, and direct Richmond–Daly City service began operating that year. [4]
Jack London Square is located at the south end of Broadway, across the Oakland Estuary from Alameda. [citation needed]The name has also come to refer to the formerly industrial neighborhood surrounding Jack London Square now known as the Jack London District, which has undergone significant rehabilitation in the last decade, including loft conversions and new construction.
1660 Embarcadero April 23, 1985 96 Civic Center Post Office: 201 13th Street April 23, 1985 97 Necklace of Lights: Lake Merritt: May 3, 1985 98 Oakland Iron Works / United Iron Works: 2nd Street at Jefferson Street July 16, 1985 99 Oakland Technical High School: 4500 Broadway July 23, 1985 100 Oakland Title Insurance Building
The Embarcadero right-of-way begins at the intersection of Second and King Streets near Oracle Park, and travels north, passing under the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge. The Embarcadero continues north past the Ferry Building at Market Street, Pier 39, and Fisherman's Wharf, before ending at Pier 45.
Berkeley was one of several ferryboats of the Southern Pacific Railroad that for sixty years operated on San Francisco Bay between the Oakland Pier and the San Francisco Ferry Building. Built in 1898 by the Union Iron Works of San Francisco, she served after the 1906 earthquake , ferrying refugees across the bay to Oakland .