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Naval Hospital Oakland

1942 establishments in CaliforniaAC with 0 elementsDefunct hospitals in CaliforniaHistory of Oakland, CaliforniaHospital buildings completed in 1942
Hospitals disestablished in 1996Hospitals in Oakland, CaliforniaHospitals in the San Francisco Bay AreaMedical installations of the United States NavyMilitary history of CaliforniaMilitary in the San Francisco Bay Area
Oak knoll
Oak knoll

Naval Hospital Oakland, also known as Oak Knoll Naval Hospital, was a U.S. naval hospital located in Oakland, California that opened during World War II (1942) and closed in 1996 as part of the 1993 Base Realignment and Closure program. The 167-acre (68 ha) site is bordered on three sides by Mountain Boulevard and Keller Avenue in the city's Oak Knoll section and its map coordinates are 37°46′05″N 122°08′46″W. Oak Knoll hospital was built during World War II for the purpose of treating American military personnel who had been wounded in the Pacific theater. In later years it also treated those who had been wounded in the Korean and Vietnam wars. The site was previously a golf course and country club which had closed during the Great Depression.A large main hospital building was started in 1965 and opened in 1968. The base was closed in 1996 in an official Navy ceremony.This building was imploded on 8 April 2011.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Naval Hospital Oakland (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Naval Hospital Oakland
Alexander Street, Oakland

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Wikipedia: Naval Hospital OaklandContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.768 ° E -122.146 °
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Address

Alexander Street

Alexander Street
94577 Oakland
California, United States
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Oak knoll
Oak knoll
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Ridgemont, Oakland, California
Ridgemont, Oakland, California

Ridgemont is a neighborhood in Oakland, California, next to Merritt College along Campus Drive, the main thoroughfare at the ridgeline. First developed in the 1970s and 1980s, the neighborhood (one of the last undeveloped parcels in the city of Oakland at the time) began as a subdivision of large, pre-designed, fairly uniform, redwood suburban-style homes. As the Ridgemont subdivision grew, new construction brought to it large estates, both subdivision planned and individual architect-designed. These, the largest homes of the neighborhood, were placed on the neighborhood crest and nearby highest points of the hillsides to take advantage of three-bridge views of the Bay. A newer subdivision,"Monte Vista Homes," on the lower slopes below the Ridgemont subdivision, commenced in 2005 as Desilva, a real estate developer, began building on slopes of the defunct Leona quarry (also known as the Alma pyrite mine). In preparation for the new subdivision, the development team subcontracted land restoration teams so that the former quarry underwent extensive land recovery ––including the replanting of fire-resistant, native plants for soil retention and beautification––prior to homes construction. But the quarry's outlines – the massive carving out of the hillside over decades – is still visible from as far away as San Francisco. A wildfire consumed about twenty acres in the district on September 26, 2017, directly threatening numerous ridgeline estates, before Oakland Fire Department crews, aided by an air tanker and helicopters which drew water from nearby San Leandro Reservoir, quickly extinguished the blaze. No structures were burned.