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Ohlone Greenway

Ohlone Greenway
Ohlone Greenway near the BART portal
LocationEast Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA
Usepedestrian and bicycle
Trail map
Richmond Greenway
Baxter Creek Gateway Park
Wildflower Area
El Cerrito del Norte Bay Area Rapid Transit
Urban Forest Demo. Area
City Hall / DMV
Fairmont Park
El Cerrito Plaza Bay Area Rapid Transit
El Cerrito Plaza
Cerrito Creek Path
San Gabriel Municipal Park
Albany Library
Gilman Street
Cedar Rose Park
North Berkeley Bay Area Rapid Transit
Ohlone Park
West Street
Berkeley Way Mini Park
University Avenue
The Berkeley School
former Berkeley Santa Fe station
Strawberry Creek Park
Santa Fe Railroad
right of way to 40th & San Pablo

The Ohlone Greenway is a 4.5-mile (7.2 km) pedestrian and bicycle path in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area.[1] The path is named for the Native American Ohlone, who live in the area.

Route

The Greenway begins in Berkeley at the east end of Ohlone Park located at Martin Luther King Jr. Way and Hearst Avenue. From there, it runs westward to the west end of the park at Sacramento and Delaware. In the segment around the North Berkeley BART Station (one block west on Delaware to Acton, then one block north on Acton to Virginia), the bike path becomes a street-running bike lane.

At Virginia, the path resumes its own dedicated course just northwest of the North Berkeley BART station and runs northwestward through the cities of Albany, and El Cerrito. It terminates at San Pablo Avenue at Baxter Creek Gateway Park in Richmond at the eastern end of the Richmond Greenway.

History

For most of its length, the Ohlone Greenway runs along what was formerly a railroad right of way, and alongside the elevated tracks of the BART Richmond line. For most of this stretch, the Greenway is divided into two paths, one for pedestrians, the other for bicyclists. The segment from the North Berkeley BART station to Rose Street in north Berkeley was formerly the right of way of the Key System's "G" Westbrae line. The segment from Rose to just north of the El Cerrito del Norte BART station was formerly the right of way of the Santa Fe Railroad (and originally, of the California and Nevada Railroad). BART began revenue operation along the elevated tracks on January 29, 1973 and the last Santa Fe run over the route was on May 12, 1979,[2] meaning it was possible to see both a BART train and a Santa Fe freight train alongside each other (the BART train above on the overhead elevated tracks) in the right of way which became the Ohlone Greenway. The "linear park" was constructed in conjunction with BART, and received federal funds for landscaping and beautification.[3] The initial 2.7 miles (4.3 km) was funded by a $400,000 federal grant.[4]

Public sculpture along the Greenway dating from the People's Park annex period, demolished in the 21st century

In late 2006, a portion of what will eventually become a branch of the Ohlone Greenway in Berkeley south to University Avenue using another segment of the old Santa Fe right-of-way was opened between University and Delaware. In November 2007, the City of Berkeley approved the use of the old Santa Fe right-of-way south of University, extending the Ohlone Greenway branch about two blocks to Strawberry Creek Park.[5] The last segment between Cedar Rose Park and Delaware remained an undeveloped dirt right-of-way blocked by a fence at Cedar until late 2010 when construction began to close this gap. It was opened in late 2012.

Portions of the Greenway were closed to the public from 2011 to 2014, due to a seismic retrofit project to strengthen the elevated BART tracks. The project was completed in January 2014.[6]

The link extending the Greenway west from the terminus at Baxter Creek to unite with the new Richmond Greenway, which runs along the abandoned former Santa Fe Railroad right of way to Point Richmond, was completed in 2018.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Kinney, Mike (April 27, 2018). "Ribbon cut on Richmond-Ohlone greenway connection". The Richmond Standard. Archived from the original on May 4, 2018. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  2. ^ "East Shore & Suburban Railway & other El Cerrito Railroad Chronology" (PDF). El Cerrito Historical Society. Retrieved September 5, 2020.
  3. ^ "A History of BART: The Project is Rescued". Bay Area Rapid Transit. Retrieved May 31, 2016.
  4. ^ "Look what has happened to the 'subway' station". BART: A bright new day for the Bay Area. San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District. November 1972. pp. 10, 11 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Oakland Tribune. December 14, 2007. p. 2 Metro Section. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. ^ "Earthquake Safety Program Construction Updates". BART. April 24, 2019.

37°54′16″N 122°18′01″W / 37.90431°N 122.30019°W / 37.90431; -122.30019

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