Rancho Bernardo, San Diego

Rancho Bernardo is a master-planned community[1] in the northern hills of the city of San Diego, California.

Rancho Bernardo, San Diego
Rancho Bernardo
Nickname(s): 
RB
Rancho Bernardo and neighborhood boundaries
Rancho Bernardo, San Diego
Location within Northeastern San Diego
Rancho Bernardo, San Diego
Rancho Bernardo, San Diego (San Diego County, California)
Coordinates: 33°01′N 117°04′W
Country United States
State California
County San Diego
City San Diego

Geography

The topography of Rancho Bernardo consists of canyons and rolling hills that have large bedrock outcroppings.[2] The major floral biomes of Rancho Bernardo are chaparral, coastal sage scrub, Southern California grassland and freshwater marsh/riparian habitat.[3]

The community is a sprawling community with shopping centers, golf courses, and office parks typical of San Diego development located about 20 miles (32 km) north-northeast of downtown San Diego, immediately east of 4S Ranch, north of Carmel Mountain Ranch, northwest of the city of Poway, and south of the city of Escondido.

History

Pre-Colonial

The pre-colonial history of this area is divided into an early (prior to circa 900 BCE) and a late period. During the late period, a village complex known as the Westwood Valley complex was located along an intermittent stream bed. The period of habitation is from around 850 CE to 1790 CE. The peoples believed to have occupied this site are the Kumeyaay (formerly known as Diegueno/Ipai), although there are strong traces of Luiseño as well.[2] The area the village occupied is now under the western section of Ranch Bernardo near Duenda and Poblado Roads.

Post-Colonial

Rancho Bernardo is located on the Rancho San Bernardo Mexican land grant made in 1842.

In the 1960s, Rancho Bernardo was annexed by San Diego. The area was developed by AVCO Community Developers.[4]

On October 22, 2007, the Witch Creek Fire burned through Rancho Bernardo and several other populous areas of San Diego County, destroying hundreds of homes, and completely destroying several entire neighborhoods, particularly ones that firefighters had trouble accessing due to rugged terrain and rapidly advancing flames pushed by strong Santa Ana winds. The highly unpredictable flames pushed into the northeast section of Poway during the day, prompting evacuation of Palomar-Pomerado Hospital. The neighborhoods of the Trails, Montelena and Westwood were the main areas hit in Rancho Bernardo.

Economy

The Carmel Mountain Ranch/Rancho Bernardo submarket is the fifth largest office space submarket in San Diego County, with over 6 million square feet of office space.[5] It is part of an "I-15 edge city", edge city being a major center of employment outside a traditional downtown.[6]

Tourism

There is an annual carnival-type street fair, RB Alive!, during the summer.[7] Rancho Bernardo is also home to the oldest-operating winery in the region, the Bernardo Winery, established in 1889 and family-owned and operated since 1927.[8]

Industry

Sony Electronics
Rancho Bernardo

Rancho Bernardo is home to Corporate Headquarters of Sony Electronics, Inc.[9] and a major office of Sony Interactive Entertainment, LLC. Other companies with a presence in the area include Broadcom, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, Renovate America, Teradata, LSI Corporation, BAE Systems, ASML, Northrop Grumman and Amazon. Located in a 685 acres (277 ha) business park, there are approximately 50,000 workers employed by these companies.

Education

The area is part of the Poway Unified School District.

Schools

Primary

  • Creekside Elementary School
  • Highland Ranch Elementary School
  • Shoal Creek Elementary School
  • Turtleback Elementary School
  • Westwood Elementary School
  • Chaparral Elementary School
  • Painted Rock Elementary School

Secondary

References

  1. "Sandiego.gov". Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  2. Kyle, Carolyn E. (1988). "An Overview of Four Late Prehistoric Sites Located in the Westwood Valley, Rancho Bernardo, California" (PDF). Articles of the SCA Proceedings. 1: 97–116. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  3. Thorne, Robert F. (1976). "The Vascular Plant Communities of California". In Latting, June (ed.). Plant Communities of Southern California. California Native Plant Society.
  4. "History - Rancho Bernardo Historical Society". Retrieved 2016-10-14.
  5. "San Diego submarkets Q1 2019", Avison Young
  6. Garreau, Joel (1991). Edge City. p. 436. Retrieved July 1, 2019.
  7. Rossi, Vincent Nicholas (2006-04-13). "Man sees music as universal language". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved 2009-05-22.
  8. "Bernardo Winery - The History". Retrieved 25 October 2013.
  9. "Sony Global - Corporate History". www.sony.net.

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