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Built in 1898, at the corner of 9th and J Street in Sacramento, California, the 20,000 square feet building was built by the behest of Frank F. Ruhstaller and housed The Ruhstaller Brewery offices. Ruhstaller also managed Buffalo Brewery and made the building its headquarters as well.
The Sutter Club is a historic building located in Sacramento, California constructed in 1930 in a Spanish Eclectic style. [2] It was recognized as a Sacramento landmark in 1982. [ 2 ] Designed by local architecture firms Dean & Dean and Starks & Flanders, it draws from Mediterranean and Spanish architectural styles. [ 2 ]
Doris Matsui presents I Street Bridge design, Sacramento, California (February 21, 2020) 02. In February 2011, the cities of Sacramento and West Sacramento released the Sacramento River Crossings Alternatives Study [15] This study determined that the I Street Bridge's "upper roadway is too narrow to serve buses, it has no bicycle facilities, and it has very narrow sidewalks".
1021 O Street is a 10-story office building located in downtown Sacramento, two blocks south of the California State Capitol.Currently known as the Capitol Annex Swing Space, the building was built to house offices for the California State Legislature, the Governor of California, and other state officials during the replacement of the Capitol Annex, a 1952 office building attached to the east ...
St. Paul 8720 Florin Rd, Sacramento 1958 [124] St. Peter & All Hallows 5501 14th Ave, Sacramento 2011 [125] St. Rose 5961 Franklin Blvd, Sacramento 1942 [126] St. Stephen the First Martyr 5461 44th St, Sacramento 2002 [127] St. Therese 100 4th St, Isleton: 1953 [128] St. Vincent de Paul 14673 Cantova Way, Rancho Murieta [129] Vietnamese Martyrs
Four of Sacramento's seven downtown streetcar lines terminated in Oak Park. The original line, the Central Street Railway, was founded in 1890 by real estate investor Edwin K. Alsip in hopes of motivating people to move to Oak Park and Highland Park. The horse-drawn streetcars were replaced by cable cars, and shortly after, electric trolley cars.
The J. Neely Johnson House is a Greek Revival style Neoclassical historic home built in 1853, located in Sacramento, California. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. [1] In 1856 it was a home of John Neely Johnson, fourth governor of California. The next fifth governor, John B. Weller, lived across the street. [2]
The Sacramento History Museum is a historical museum in Sacramento, California, which interprets the history of Sacramento and the California Gold Rush. The museum is located within the Old Sacramento State Historic Park , situated along the Sacramento River between the Tower Bridge and I Street Bridge .