The spirited Oakland neighborhood of Rockridge has been spotlighted in
the national media twice in recent years. Hard-hit by a disastrous fire
and named a top livable neighborhood by a national magazine, the north
Oakland neighborhood has had a diverse and eventful history. Early booms
in commerce and population pushed Oakland city boundaries east and north
through farmland, toward the university town of Berkeley, and the
neighborhood of Rockridge was formed. Shaped by its farms, homes,
streetcars, interurban trains, shops, markets, movie houses, a quarry,
and Oakland's first reservoir, Rockridge's story is one of hard labor in
the quarry and the practice of the fine arts, of ethnic markets and the
short-lived grand estates of mining tycoons, of the taming of wild
creeks and the subdivision of open spaces. The town witnessed
experiments in planned development, the effect of freeways and rapid
transit, changes brought by the Depression and World War II, the
transformation of College Avenue, and trends in home building that today
allow the landscape to reveal Rockridge's history.