Jack London Square

Jack London Square is an entertainment and business destination on the waterfront of Oakland, California, United States. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak station, a San Francisco Bay Ferry ferry dock, the historic Heinold's First and Last Chance Saloon, the (re-located) cabin where Jack London lived in the Klondike, and a movie theater. A farmer's market is hosted among the retail shops on Sunday mornings. The former presidential yacht USS Potomac is moored at an adjacent slip.

Jack London Square
Neighborhood of Oakland
Jack London docks at dawn, summertime
Location of Jack London Square in Oakland
Coordinates: 37.7942°N 122.2747°W / 37.7942; -122.2747
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountyAlameda
CityOakland
An excursion train pulled by a classic BC Rail steam locomotive visits Jack London Square in 1977
Reconstruction of Jack London's Klondike Hut in Jack London Square

Geography

Jack London Square is located at the south end of Broadway, across the Oakland Estuary from Alameda.

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.

Former California Governor (and former Oakland mayor) Jerry Brown made his home here before moving north to the Uptown neighborhood.

Tenants and businesses

KTVU (Channel 2), the Bay Area's Fox affiliate, has had studios at the Square since it began broadcasting on March 3, 1958, and the offices of the Port of Oakland are located there as well. The Square was also the temporary home of the Oakland Tribune from 1989 to 1996 after the newspaper was forced to abandon the landmark downtown Tribune Tower due to damage it sustained in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.[1]

Other businesses at Jack London Square range from the Oakland Athletics team headquarters and software firm Navis LLC, to restaurants such as Kincaid's Bay House and Yoshi's restaurant and jazz club.[2] California Canoe & Kayak retail and kayak rental shop has been located in Jack London Square since 1993.

Railways and transit

A mainline railroad runs through the middle of Embarcadero West, with the train speed limit set at 15 mph (25 km/h). The tracks running through Jack London Square are used by BNSF Railway, Capitol Corridor, Coast Starlight, San Joaquin, and Union Pacific Railroad. The trains share the road with automobiles, AC Transit buses, and pedestrians.[3] A second Transbay Tube may include a BART station at the square. Another possibility is an aerial tramway to BART stations in downtown Oakland.[4]

Design and development

Jack London Square's most recent changes are adding more businesses, restaurants, and entertainment. Under lead developer Ellis Partners, Jack London Square's new architecture and public spaces are adding to the daytime and nighttime population and use. Recent new components include the 55 Harrison building, a 178,000-square-foot (16,500 m2) mid-rise by RMW Architects in association with Steve Worthington. The public spaces by SWA Group extended the city to the waterfront by adding accessible waterfront spaces supporting a variety of programs and events from farmers markets to the popular Eat Real local, organic food fest.[5] The Athletics plan on building the new Oakland Ballpark nearby at Howard Terminal.[4]

See also

References

  1. Allen, Annalee (2006). Selections from the Oakland Tribune Archives. Arcadia Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 9780738546780.
  2. Article from S.F. Business Times
  3. "RailPictures.Net » Jack London Square". www.railpictures.net. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
  4. Swan, Rachel (2019-07-03). "How to get to the A's proposed ballpark? Oakland council nervously counts the ways - SFChronicle.com". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-07-03.
  5. King, John (2013-02-19). Giving Jack London Square a nip and tuck. SF Gate, 19 February 2013. Retrieved from http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/place/article/Giving-Jack-London-Square-a-nip-and-tuck-4290563.php.

Bibliography

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