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The Pruneyard Shopping Center is a 250,000 sq ft (23,000 m 2) open-air shopping center located in Campbell, California, at the intersection of Campbell Avenue and Bascom Avenue, just east of State Route 17. It was built in the 1960s as the PruneYard Shopping Center.
San Carlos Street is a major east–west city street in San Jose, California. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It consists of two unconnected parts. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The western part is an arterial road from Stevens Creek Boulevard to South 4th Street, [ 3 ] and the eastern part is a residential street from South 10th Street to South 17th Street. [ 2 ]
Even with the advent of Highway 17, the original roadways continue to play essential roles as major thoroughfares for the communities of Campbell, Los Gatos, and San Jose. [2] The house changed hands, passing to Collette and Charley Sartorette in 1946, who raised horses on the property. [4] The original location of the house was 14301 S. Bascom ...
The Luther Burbank School is located at 4 Wabash Avenue. The only public school located in Burbank is Luther Burbank School, a K-8 elementary school located on San Carlos Street and Wabash. It is the only school operated by the Luther Burbank School District (LBSD). Founded in 1906, the District celebrated its centennial in 2006.
The City of San Jose suggests that trail users connect from the main trail to the northern segment by exiting the main trail onto Willow Street approximately 0.8 mi (1.3 km) short of the terminus on Meridian, then proceeding northeast along Willow Street, left on Glen Eyrie Avenue, left on Lincoln Avenue, and then right on Lonus Street. [4]
Goodwin Avenue — named after San Jose City Manager C. B. Goodwin; Goodyear Street — named after Miles Goodyear, who owned 30 acres in the area. Graham Avenue — named after John (Jack) Martin Graham, a baseball columnist for the San Jose Mercury Herald. The street is where the baseball grandstands used to be. [10]
Hooper's store has retained its art deco barstools and lunch counter, but now has free Wi-Fi. "Sesame Street" has been gentrified. After 45 seasons, the brick walls that once fenced in the neighborhood have been razed, giving way to sweeping views of what looks suspiciously like the Brooklyn Bridge (it is in fact a composite of three New York ...
WORKS/San José began in October 1977, by a group of artists and San Jose State University faculty and students in downtown San Jose. [3] Early members of WORKS/San José include: Tony May, Erin Goodwin Guerrero, Ruth Tunstall Grant, Jan Rindfleisch, George Rivera, Rebecca Schapp, Anna Koster, Fred Shepard, Albert Dixon.