place

Hayward City Hall

1990s architecture in the United StatesAlameda County, California building and structure stubsBuildings and structures in Hayward, CaliforniaCity halls in CaliforniaGovernment buildings completed in 1998
Government of Hayward, California
Hayward City Hall number 3 front
Hayward City Hall number 3 front

Hayward City Hall is the third and current Hayward city hall building, located in downtown Hayward, California, United States, next to the Hayward BART Station. The city hall opened in January 1998, replacing the abandoned City Center Building, which served as Hayward's city hall for 29 years from 1969 to 1998. Hayward's first city hall, which is also closed to the public, is now in the Alex Giualini Plaza, three blocks away.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hayward City Hall (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Hayward City Hall
B Street, Hayward

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Hayward City HallContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.67112 ° E -122.08557 °
placeShow on map

Address

Hayward City Hall

B Street
94541 Hayward
California, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
hayward-ca.gov

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q947523)
linkOpenStreetMap (104589960)

Hayward City Hall number 3 front
Hayward City Hall number 3 front
Share experience

Nearby Places

Downtown Hayward
Downtown Hayward

Downtown Hayward is the original and current central business district of Hayward, California, United States, and is home to the current Hayward City Hall, along with the two previous city halls, Alex Giualini Plaza and the City Center Building. The Hayward Fault runs through the area, and is the cause of the two previous city halls being taken out of use. The boundaries are Third Street to the east, Grand Street and Hayward BART to the west, Jackson Street and E Street to the south, and City Center Drive/Hazel Avenue to the north. Foothill Boulevard was known as "The Golden Strip", a retail business corridor that was built in the 1950s, and housed Capwell's and I. Magnin department stores. The street lost businesses after the opening of Southland Mall in 1964. Parks include Newman Park and The Julio Bras Portuguese Park. San Lorenzo Creek runs through downtown. The Hayward Public Library is located there. "Hayward City Center" a mall and building complex located at the northern end of downtown, contains the City Center Building, which served as the city's second city hall from 1969 to 1991, and is now an abandoned 11 story building, Hayward's tallest building, formerly the second tallest prior to California State University, East Bay's Warren Hall demolition in 2013. The City Center complex previously contained the now demolished Centennial Hall Convention Center. The bankrupt Mervyns department store chain's large former headquarters is across the street from the City Center mall. The Hayward Area Historical Society operates a museum downtown, which relocated and re-opened June 2014. The FBI operates a resident agency in downtown Hayward. The Hayward Art Council, founded in 1975, operates the Sun Gallery downtown. The Independent Order of Odd Fellows building on B Street is one of Hayward's oldest buildings, and was built in 1868. The Hayward 9/11 Memorial was dedicated May 30, 2016, to the first responders who died in 9/11, and to the city's own fallen first responders, and the city's fallen soldiers.