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San Francisco Bay Area

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"Bay Area" redirects here. For , see .
USGS Satellite photo of the San Francisco Bay Area.
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USGS Satellite photo of the San Francisco Bay Area.

The San Francisco Bay Area.
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The San Francisco Bay Area.

The San Francisco Bay Area, also known, simply, as the Bay Area, is a geographically diverse metropolitan area that surrounds the San Francisco Bay in Northern California. Home to almost eight million people, it is composed of cities, towns, military bases, airports, and associated regional, state, and national parks sprawled over nine counties and connected by a massive network of roads, highways, railroads, and commuter rail.

The Bay Area, unlike a typical metropolitan area, does not contain a single dominating city. San Jose is the largest city in the Bay Area, surpassing San Francisco in the 1990 census. However, San Francisco, remains the cultural, financial, tourist, and urban center of the region. The metropolitan area comprising the city of San Francisco together with Oakland and San Jose is the fifth-largest in the United States, behind New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Washington-Baltimore.

Subregions

East Bay

Main article: East Bay (San Francisco Bay Area)
Berkeley as seen from the Claremont Canyon reserve
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Berkeley as seen from the Claremont Canyon reserve

The eastern side of the bay, dominated by the city of Oakland but also including Alameda, Berkeley, Fremont, Livermore, Hayward and several small cities, is known locally as the East Bay. The East Bay is split into two regions, the inner East Bay, which sits on the Bay coastline, and the outer East Bay, consisting of inland valleys separated from the inner East Bay by hills and mountains.

North Bay

Main article: North Bay (San Francisco Bay Area)
Napa Valley is most famous for its wine.
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Napa Valley is most famous for its wine.

The region north of the Golden Gate Bridge is known locally as the North Bay. This area consists of Marin County and extends northward into Sonoma and Napa Counties and eastward to Solano County. With some exceptions, this region is quite affluent, and is generally the least urbanized part of the Bay Area, with many areas of undeveloped park and farmland. It is the only section of the Bay Area that is not served by a commuter rail transit service, though Sonoma-Marin service has entered the planning phase. The lack of transportation services is mainly because the lack of population mass in the North Bay, and the fact that it is separated completely from the rest of the Bay Area by water, the only access points being the Golden Gate Bridge leading to San Francisco, the Richmond-San Rafael and Carquinez Bridges leading to Richmond, and the Benicia Bridge leading to Concord.

San Francisco & The Peninsula

Main article: San Francisco & San Francisco Peninsula

The City and County of San Francisco is known, locally, simply as The City. It is generally placed in a category by itself geographically, mentally and culturally. It is separated by water from the north, west and east, and by a county line from its neighbor cities to the South. San Francisco serves as the cultural, tourist, financial and urban center of the region.

The area between the South Bay and the City and County of San Francisco is known as the San Francisco Peninsula, locally just as The Peninsula. This area consists of a series of small cities and suburban communities along the Bay such as Palo Alto and Stanford University, Mountain View, Daly City, San Mateo, and Foster City, as well as various towns along the Pacific coast, such as Pacifica and Half Moon Bay.

South Bay

Main article: South Bay (San Jose, California), Santa Clara Valley, and Silicon Valley
The communities along the southern edge of the Bay are known as the South Bay, Santa Clara Valley, and Silicon Valley. Some Peninsula and East Bay towns are sometimes included in the latter. It includes the city of San Jose, and its smaller neighbors including Gilroy and the high-tech hubs of Santa Clara, Cupertino, Palo Alto and Sunnyvale, as well as many other suburbs.
Looking west over northern San Jose (downtown is at far left) and other parts of Silicon Valley
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Looking west over northern San Jose (downtown is at far left) and other parts of Silicon Valley

Affluence

The San Francisco Bay Area is one of the wealthiest regions in the United States. According to the United States Census Bureau, of the 280 defined metropolitan areas, the San Francisco Bay Area has the highest median household income in the nation with $62,024. Six of the top ten California places with the highest per capita income are in the San Francisco Bay Area (Belvedere, Atherton, Woodside, Portola Valley, Diablo). Of the 100 highest income counties by per capita income in the United States, six are in the San Francisco Bay Area (Marin, San Mateo, San Francisco, Santa Clara, Contra Costa, Alameda). According to Forbes Magazine, published in 2005, 12 of the top 50 most expensive Zip Codes are in the Bay Area (Atherton, Ross, Diablo, Tiburon, Los Altos, Nicasio, Portola Valley, Los Gatos, San Francisco).

Weather

Because the hills, mountains, and large bodies of water produce such vast geographic diversity within this region, the Bay Area offers a significant variety of microclimates. The areas near the Pacific Ocean are generally characterized by relatively small temperature variations during the year, with cool foggy summers and mild rainy winters. Inland areas, especially those separated from the ocean by hills or mountains, have hotter summers and colder overnight temperatures during the winter. Most of the major residential areas never experience snow (the last noticeable snowfall at the sea level regions occurred on February 5, 1976), while the highest of the surrounding peaks are dusted with snow half a dozen times each winter (including Mount St. Helena, Mount Hamilton, Mount Diablo, Mount Tamalpais). Sometimes, if a strong cold front moves through, the mountains could get more than a dusting of snow, like in 2001 when 30 inches of snow fell on Mount Hamilton. The coast north of San Francisco, where year-round cool, moist conditions enable redwoods to grow, has almost nothing in common with Livermore, just 40 miles inland across the bay, which has desert-like precipitation and heat. At the south end of the Bay, San Jose averages fewer than 15 inches of rain annually, while Napa at the north end of the Bay averages over 30 and parts of the Santa Cruz Mountains to the west get over 55.

Skyline Boulevard stretches through the Santa Cruz Mountains, here near Palo Alto, California. During winter and spring, the hills surrounding the Bay Area are lush and green
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Skyline Boulevard stretches through the Santa Cruz Mountains, here near Palo Alto, California. During winter and spring, the hills surrounding the Bay Area are lush and green

Rain is extremely rare in the Bay Area during the summer months. As a result, the surrounding hills quickly become dry.
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Rain is extremely rare in the Bay Area during the summer months. As a result, the surrounding hills quickly become dry.

Transportation

Main article: Transportation in the San Francisco Bay Area
The Bay Area is served by many public transportation systems, including three international airports (SFO, OAK, SJC), six overlapping bus transit agencies, four rapid transit and regional rail systems including BART, and multiple public ferry services.

The freeway and highway system is very extensive; however, many freeways are heavily congested during rush hour, especially the trans-bay bridges.

Higher education

The region is home to several universities and seminaries, most notably the University of California, Berkeley and Stanford University.

Public

Seminaries
Private
University of California, Berkeley.
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University of California, Berkeley.

Stanford University.
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Stanford University.

Religious life

The San Francisco Bay Area has a very diverse religious life with thousands of churches, mosques, temples, and other religious centers. The Bay Area is home to Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Shiite-Muslim, Sikh, Sunni-Muslim, and numerous other religious communities.

Sports

Club Sport League Venue
San Francisco 49ers Football National Football League Monster Park
Oakland Raiders Football National Football League McAfee Coliseum
San Francisco Giants Baseball National League (Major League Baseball) AT&T Park
Oakland Athletics Baseball American League (Major League Baseball) McAfee Coliseum
Golden State Warriors Basketball National Basketball Association Oakland Arena
San Jose Sharks Ice Hockey National Hockey League HP Pavilion
San Jose SaberCats Football Arena Football League HP Pavilion
San Jose Stealth Lacrosse National Lacrosse League HP Pavilion
San Francisco Dragons Lacrosse Major League Lacrosse Kezar Stadium

NCAA Division I College Sports

Regional counties, cities and suburbs

Cities in bold serve as county seat.

Counties

Cities with more than 300,000 inhabitants

Cities with 100,000 to 300,000 inhabitants

Municipalities and suburbs with 10,000 to 100,000 inhabitants

Municipalities and suburbs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
[media]

References

External links

State of California
California Topics | Districts | Economy | Elections | Geography | Government | History | Politics | Californians
List of capitals in the United States>Capital Sacramento, California>Sacramento


-->bgcolor="lightsteelblue"|Regions
Antelope Valley | Big Sur | Central Valley | Central Coast | Channel Islands | Coachella Valley | Conejo Valley | Death Valley | Eastern California | Emerald Triangle | Gold Country | Greater Los Angeles | Imperial Valley | Inland Empire | Mojave | Northern California | North San Diego County | Owens Valley | Pomona Valley | The Peninsula | Redwood Empire | Sacramento Valley | San Fernando Valley | San Francisco Bay Area | San Gabriel Valley | Santa Clara Valley | Santa Clarita Valley | San Joaquin Valley | Shasta Cascade | Sierra Nevada | Silicon Valley | Southern California | Wine Country | Yosemite
United States metropolitan area>Metropolitan areas Bakersfield | Chico | Fresno | Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale | Modesto | Napa | Oakland-Fremont-Hayward | Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura | Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario | Sacramento-Roseville | Salinas | San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos | San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City | San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara | San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles | Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine | Santa Barbara-Santa Maria | Santa Cruz-Watsonville | Santa Rosa-Petaluma | Stockton | Vallejo-Fairfield | Visalia-Porterville | Yuba City
Note: Cities with over 400,000 in population are in bold


-->Counties
Alameda | Alpine | Amador | Butte | Calaveras | Colusa | Contra Costa | Del Norte | El Dorado | Fresno | Glenn | Humboldt | Imperial | Inyo | Kern | Kings | Lake | Lassen | Los Angeles | Madera | Marin | Mariposa | Mendocino | Merced | Modoc | Mono | Monterey | Napa | Nevada | Orange | Placer | Plumas | Riverside | Sacramento | San Benito | San Bernardino | San Diego | San Francisco | San Joaquin | San Luis Obispo | San Mateo | Santa Barbara | Santa Clara | Santa Cruz | Shasta | Sierra | Siskiyou | Solano | Sonoma | Stanislaus | Sutter | Tehama | Trinity | Tulare | Tuolumne | Ventura | Yolo | Yuba
Note: Counties with over 1 million in population are in bold

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
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