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Fremont Travel Guide

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Fremont [1] is a suburban city in the southeast Bay Area in Alameda County. For the most part, people in Fremont work in the electronics industry, and usually commute to the Silicon Valley for work.

Contents

Understand

Mission Peak is visible throughout Fremont.
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Mission Peak is visible throughout Fremont.

Unlike most sprawling suburbs, Fremont was planned and was meant to be the way it is. In the 1950s, fearing that they would be annexed by the growing city of Hayward to the north, seven very small towns decided to unite to avoid annexation. The two towns closest to Hayward quickly incorporated into Union City. The six remaining towns got together and extensively planned how things would be. Space was allocated both for industry and homes. Space for roads large enough to support the massive traffic flows was set aside. One of the small cities (Newark) dropped out of the coalition because it was slated to become an industrial zone. The five cities annexed all the surrounding land to form Fremont.

The oldest of the small towns was Mission San Jose, a Spanish mission founded in 1797. Fremont has been multicultural since its inception. Today's visitor is likely to hear half a dozen languages spoken even during a fleeting trip to the city.

Fremont is bordered by Milpitas to the south and Union City to the north, and it entirely surrounds the small city of Newark.

Get in

By air

  • Oakland Airport is about twenty minutes away by car via I880 depending on time of day. Or you can take a shuttle from the airport to BART, which runs to Fremont.
  • San Jose Airport is about half an hour away via I880 or I680. During commute hours the traffic is horrific.
  • San Francisco Airport is about 45 minutes away via US101 and SR84 (the Dumbarton Bridge). This is the most difficult airport to get to and also the worst for flight delays in the area. Avoid SFO if you can get a flight direct to to Oakland or San Jose instead. There is a BART station in SFO which can take you to Fremont.

By car

  • From Oakland and Berkeley, take I880 south
  • From San Jose, take I880 or I680 north
  • From San Francisco and Palo Alto, take US101 to SR84 (the Dumbarton Bridge)
  • From the central valley, take I680 south

By train

The BART rapid transit system is a Bay Area train service with its southernmost stop in Fremont. From Fremont there are trains north through Oakland, with Richmond or Daly City as their final destinations. By changing trains it is also possible to go inland all the way to Dublin/Pleasanton or to continue beyond Daly City to Millbrae, passing San Francisco International Airport (SFO) on the way.

The Amtrak Capitols route is a local train which makes a stop in Fremont. Long distance Amtrak trains run to Sacramento, which is on the Capitols route. Links to the western outskirts of Oakland and Berkeley, and a short bus ride away from downtown San Jose.

The Altamont Commuter Express (ACE) train also stops in Fremont. The ACE train runs from towns in the east bringing commuters into the Silicon Valley. This train isn't very convenient for a traveller since it's loaded with passengers, and only travels from the east three times a day during the morning commute.

By bus

The Valley Transit Authority line 180 bus runs from downtown San Jose to Fremont BART even on weekends and holidays. AC Transit runs the U line to Stanford University and the Dumbarton Express to Palo Alto but only during weekday commute hours.

Get around

By car

This is the preferred method. Fremont streets are usually easy to navigate. Difficult intersections were re-engineered for efficiency decades ago. Motorists will find travel to be very slow during commute hours in the unfavorable direction.

By bike

Bike lanes are present on many major roads in Fremont. For maximum safety, avoid the large roads that lead to the freeway since they are the most congested, and your bike isn't going to go on the freeway anyway, is it?

By bus

The AC Transit bus system serves Fremont poorly. Bus schedules are designed for the daily commuter, not the casual traveler. In the middle of the day, buses may run as infrequently as once per hour, so be sure you have an up-to-date bus schedule and know when your bus is coming. http://www.actransit.org/


See

Mission San José de Guadalupe
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Mission San José de Guadalupe
  • Mission San Jose, 43300 Mission Blvd. Daily 10AM-5PM. Spanish mission founded in 1797. The original mission church buildings are long gone, but the current rebuilt mission is nice with a good museum.
  • Don Edwards National Wildlife Refuge, (Take SR84 west toward the Dumbarton Bridge. Go south at the Thornton Exit. After a quarter mile, turn right onto Marshlands Rd. At the stop sign, turn left into the refuge parking lot), +1 510 792-0222, [2]. The baylands around the south end of the San Francisco Bay have been turned into a Wildlife Refuge. The museum at the headquarters in Fremont is worth seeing.
  • Ardenwood Historic Farm, 34600 Ardenwood Blvd., [3]. Tu-Su 10AM-4PM, A working farm founded in 19th century. Organic produce available. Old buildings. Demonstrations of 19th century trades. Tu W Sa Adults $2, Children $1; Th F Su Adults $5, Children $4.
  • Central Park, 40000 Paseo Padre Parkway, [4]. Huge park with lake. Great for a picnic, kite-flying or exercise. Boat rentals available.
  • NUMMI Tour, [5]. Visit a high-tech auto assembly plant and see giant welding and stamping machines. By reservation only, but free.
  • Sunol Water Temple, just east of Fremont proper on SR84, the Niles Canyon Road, [6]. M-F 9AM-3PM. All tourists will want to see some of California's infamous waterworks and the surprisingly attractive Water Temple is the closest exemplar.
  • Niles Film Museum, 37395 Niles Boulevard, +1 510 494-1411, [7]. Sa noon-4PM. Silent Films, some produced locally. Showings are Friday and Saturday nights for a small fee, and fine homemade snacks are served.
  • Naz Cinema, 39160 Paseo Padre Parkway, +1 510 797-2000, [8]. Shows Bollywood Films' produced on the other side of the globe, most with English subtitles. The concession offers good-quality snacks like pakoras and samosas.
  • Little Kabul Fremont is home to an estimated 10k-15k Afghanis. 1.5 blocks of Fremont Blvd intersected by Peralta is lined with 2 Afghani restaurants, a kabob shop, a few markets, and other non-Afghani businesses.

Do

  • Alameda Creek Trail, [9]. 5AM-10PM. 12 mile long bike trail follows the Alameda Creek flood-control channel from the hills to the bay. The paved trail is entirely car-free due to underpasses beneath each cross-street. About two miles from the bay, you can optionally go to Coyote Hills for a good view. From there, you can proceed south to the Don Edwards Wildlife refuge, and then west to the bike lane over the Dumbarton Bridge. Starting from the easternmost point on the trail (at the Niles Staging Area on Old Canyon Road) means that you will generally go downwind last when you are most tired.
  • Coyote Hills Regional Park, 8000 Patterson Ranch Road, [10]. Apr-Oct 8AM-8PM, Oct-Apr 8AM-6PM. Good place for hiking, biking, picnicking, and wildlife viewing. Isolated small hill near the bay with a great view of San Francisco on a clear day. $5 per vehicle.
  • Mission Peak is a great place to hike where you get a very nice view of the Bay Area. On top you can see throughout into Livermore and beyond as well.
  • Broadway West, 4000-B Bay Street, (510) 683-9218. A stage company that performs five plays every year in a very intimate setting. Expect well-performed, offbeat plays. They also hold dinner mystery theatres, and plays by local writers. http://www.broadway-west.com/
  • Ride The Niles Canyon Railway offers scenic one-hour steam locomotive excursions through the very canyon where Charlie Chaplin's "The Tramp" was filmed. A donation of $5-10 is suggested.
  • Skate The Sharks Ice Arena is a pleasant place to ice-skate that has public hours nearly every day. Central Park is a fine place for roller-skating.

Buy

  • Fry's Electronics. 43800 Osgood Road, (510) 242-5300. The infamous electronics store with hundred-foot high ceilings and acres of space.
  • Ranch 99, 34444 Fremont Blvd in Centerville, (510) 791-8899, or Lion Food Center, 46881 Warm Springs Boulevard, (510)659-8899. The cheapest way for Americans to travel to the Pacific Rim is to visit one of these stores, which are full of exotica but also a great place to buy Asian cookware or pick up healthy take-out food.
  • Farmers' Markets, at Irvington's Five Corners (Bay Street and Fremont Boulevard) and in Centerville (Bonde Way and Fremont Boulevard), [11]. Lots of towns have Farmers' Markets but Fremont's features the tastes and smells of the Far East: opu melon, malabar spinach, gai lan, balut and innumerable others. Of course there are heirloom tomatoes and apples as well.
  • Fremont Hub on Mowry avenue, is a regional shopping center with Target.

Eat

Many restaurants cater to Fremont's large immigrant community. Chinese, Indian, and Afghani food are very common.

  • Chinese Buffet, 5035 Mowry Avenue, (510) 818-1908. Don't let the generic name stop you from coming in; it's quite good for a Chinese Buffet. All you can eat crab, beef ribs, sushi, Mongolian barbecue, shrimp, duck, and other food. Expect a fifteen-minute wait to get in.
  • Elephant Bar Restaurant, 39233 Fremont Blvd., (510) 742-6221. A better than average chain restaurant, at about the usual price for a slightly upscale restaurant. Kids meals are cheap here.
  • Fu Lam Moon, 40460 Albrae St near Stevenson, (510) 668-1333. A fine place for dim sum on weekends from about 10-2. Not recommended for regular meals.
  • Habibi Restaurant, Irvington Shopping Plaza, 3906 Washington Blvd., [12]. "The Flavor of Lebanon." A small and noisy neighborhood place with tasty food.
  • King Noodle House, 39226 Argonaut Way, (510) 795-2888. Cheap, fast and filling Asian cuisine.
  • Salang Pass, 37462 Fremont Blvd., (510) 795-9200. An upscale, superb Afghani restaurant with superb kabobs and beautiful decor. Possibly the best Afghani food in the Bay Area. If you're looking for something cheaper, "De Kabob House", across the street, is excellent and has lots of character, but tiny and slow. Just look for the long line of hungry people standing outside a door. No alcohol is served.
  • De Afghanan The other Afghani restaurant--located across the street--in town. Slightly cheaper but can't otherwise beat Salang.
  • Chaat Cafe, 3954 Mowry Road, (510) 796-3408. A good Indian food place that serves wraps, kebobs and curries.
  • Yuki Japanese Restaurant, 1932 Driscoll Rd. near Paseo Padre Parkway, (510) 656-5021. Outstanding sushi and traditional Japanese dishes prepared with flare. Quite possibly Fremont's finest restaurant. Be prepared to wait during peak hours.
  • The Country Way, 5325 Mowry Avenue, (510) 797-3188, this restaurant is of notoriety for Fremont residents. Ask anybody and they will tell you that this place has the best, most filling meals. Especially for breakfast.

If you want a fancy restaurant, consider crossing the Dumbarton Bridge to Palo Alto.

Sleep

  • AmeriSuites Silicon Valley/Fremont, 3101 West Warren Ave, Tel: (510) 623-6000[13].
  • Best Western Garden Court, 5400 Mowry Avenue, (510) 792-4300, Fax: (510) 792-2643, [14].
  • Courtyard Fremont Silicon Valley, 47000 Lakeview Boulevard, (510) 656-1800, Fax: (510) 656-2441, [15].
  • Fremont Marriott, 46100 Landing Parkway, (510) 413-3700, Fax: (510) 413-3710, [16].
  • Hampton Inn, 6500 Landing Parkway, (510) 498-1900, [17].
  • Hawthorne Suites, 42200 Albrae St., (510) 651-7373, Fax: (510) 651-7362, [18].
  • Holiday Inn Express, 47031 Kato Rd, (510) 490-2900, [19].
  • La Quinta Inn and Suites, 46200 Landing Parkway, (510) 445-0808, [20]. Good free breakfast, free high-speed internet in some rooms, but call the local number to maker sure you are really getting one of the right rooms--don't rely on the description when booking on the web.
  • Lord Bradley's Inn, 43344 Mission Boulevard, (510) 490-0520, Fax: (510) 490-3015.
  • Motel 6 Fremont North, 34047 Fremont Boulevard, (510) 793-4848, Fax: (510) 791-8170, [21]. This chain is a great cheap place to stay when you're out in the middle of nowhere on a highway. And usually terrible in major cities. Fremont resembles the latter.
  • Motel 6 Fremont South, 46101 Research Avenue, (510) 490-4528, Fax: (510) 490-5937, [22].
  • Residence Inn Fremont Silicon Valley, 5400 Farwell Place, (510) 794-5900, Fax: (510) 793-6587, [23].
  • Silicon Valley/Fremont AmeriSuites, 3101 West Warren Ave, (510) 623-6000, Fax: (510) 623-6001, [24].

Get out

Day trips

  • Get touristy by going to San Francisco via BART. Ride the cable cars from the Powell Street BART Station to Fisherman's Wharf, thereby accomplishing two of the most touristy things on the West Coast.
  • The Oakland Museum of California [25] in Oakland is the best museum about California history. Take BART to the Lake Merritt station in Oakland. Exit the station to 9th Street and walk down Oak Street with the one-way flow of traffic. The entrance to the museum will be on the right side of Oak Street midway between 10th and 12th Streets.
  • Ride the Rails to the California State Railroad Museum [26] in Sacramento. Take Amtrak's Capitol Corridor train to Sacramento. From the Sacramento station, walk across the parking lot (under the overpasses) west about a block. The museum has one of the largest collections of antique trains in the United States. On summer weekends you can also catch a short steam-train ride. The museum is located in Old Sacramento which provides touristy shops and food. Be careful when reading the train schedule: buses are used for some segments at certain hours, so make sure the schedule says you get a train and not a bus.
  • See the ocean by going to the Monterey Bay Aquarium [27] in Monterey. It's about two and a half hours by car. A great place to both see and learn about the local ocean. After the museum, grab a seafood dinner at the Monterey Fisherman's Wharf [28] or Cannery Row. If you have an uncontrollable desire to swim in the freezing Pacific water, the beach in Carmel (just south of Monterey) is the place to try it.

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