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Camron-Stanford House

History museums in CaliforniaHouses completed in 1871Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in CaliforniaMuseums in Oakland, CaliforniaMuseums in the San Francisco Bay Area
National Register of Historic Places in Alameda County, CaliforniaVictorian architecture in California
Cameron Stanford House (Oakland, CA)
Cameron Stanford House (Oakland, CA)

The Camron-Stanford House is the last of the 19th-century Victorian mansions that once surrounded Lake Merritt in Oakland, California. It was the home to a series of influential families, and in 1907, became the city's first museum.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Camron-Stanford House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Camron-Stanford House
Lakeside Drive, Oakland

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Wikipedia: Camron-Stanford HouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.801388888889 ° E -122.26111111111 °
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Address

Lake Merritt Boat House (Municipal Boathouse)

Lakeside Drive 1520
94612 Oakland
California, United States
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Cameron Stanford House (Oakland, CA)
Cameron Stanford House (Oakland, CA)
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Nearby Places

Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as The Gold Coast, and simply as The Lakeside, is one of Oakland's historic residential neighborhoods between the Downtown district and Lake Merritt. In the context of a Cultural Heritage Survey, the City of Oakland officially named most of the blocks of the neighborhood "The Lakeside Apartments District," and designated it as a local historic district with architecturally significant historic places, and Areas of Primary Importance (APIs). The greater neighborhood includes the interior blocks officially designated as a local historic district and the 'Gold Coast' peripheral areas along Lakeside Drive, 20th Street, and the west edge of Lake Merritt, areas closer to 14th Street and the Civic Center district, and blocks adjacent to downtown along Harrison Street. The district is characterized by a predominance of rent-stabilized apartments, mixed-use buildings, and a long history of regional mass transit connections serving its central location. In recent years, mid-rise, mixed-use, market rate, and affordable rental housing has been planned, proposed, approved, constructed, and inhabited. At the present, other developers have proposed market-rate condominium skyscrapers and other high-rise towers which have idled in various stages of the planning process. From 2007 to 2009, the Oakland Planning Commission revised zoning and building height regulations for the neighborhood.