Thursday, March 14, 2013

History San José’s Family Days Series Celebrates International World Water Day Saturday, March 23 at History Park in Kelley Park




San José, CA – March 7, 2013 ---March 22 marks the 20th anniversary of International World Water Day. By decree from the United Nations General Assembly, this year’s theme of “International Year of Water Co-Operation---Make Every Drop Count,” is a day that focuses on the importance of freshwater and the sustainable management of freshwater resources. Just in time, History San Jose is hosting a Coyote Creek Cleanup, as well as its exhibit, Shaped by Water: Past, Present and Future.
 
History San José will celebrate World Water Day on Saturday, March 23 by inviting the public to a cleanup of the banks of Coyote Creek, that runs between History Park and Happy Hollow Park and Zoo. Partnering with Bright Green San Jose, Santa Clara Water District and Watershed Watch, History Park will raise awareness of the significance of water.
 
"The importance of water is life itself, and don't we all take it for granted?" asks Alida Bray, President and CEO of History San Jose. "With World Water Day and the exhibit Shaped by Water: Past Present & Future we are reminded that when history meets the present day, it is important to plan for the future."
 
Coyote Creek is one of the largest watersheds in the Santa Clara Valley. Sixteen major creeks drain the 350 square miles that comprise the watershed, which eventually meets tidewater and becomes part of the salt marsh at the foot of the San Francisco Bay. It is home to over one-half million people, and provides a habitat for a wide variety of plants, fish and animals and runs from Milpitas to Morgan Hill.
 
In keeping with the theme, a Spring Egg Hunt will take place for children ages 2 to 9 on the Firehouse Lawn.  Registration for the egg hunt is from noon to 12:45 PM on the porch at the Pacific Hotel, with the hunt beginning at 1 PM. Donation is $2 per child.
 
Inside the Gallery of the Pacific Hotel is  Shaped by Water: Past, Present and Future, an exhibit depicting how water has literally shaped the history of Santa Clara Valley, and highlights what challenges our community will face in the future. The exhibition demonstrates through photographs, artistic interpretations, stories and interactive activities for kids of all ages, the unique connection between humans and this precious and finite resource.
 
There will also be a Water Fair including participants from local agencies dealing with water and conservation. In conjunction with Watershed Watch, and “Bright Green San José,” the environmental branch of the City of San José, the ‘spring cleaning’ will take place from  9 AM to Noon. The clean-up is for children ages 10 and up, as well as adults.  Park clean-up registration begins at 9 am at the Phelan Avenue entrance to History Park. There is no charge for the creek clean-up, and everyone is invited to learn about the freshwater.
 
Then at 2 PM on the Plaza at History Park, watch the “Water Wizard” Kathy Machado, with the Santa Clara Valley Water District, perform seemingly impossible feats with water.
 
Refreshments will be available for purchase from Larry’s Hot Dogs, Mona’s Fruit, Treat Ice Cream in O’Brien’s Ice Cream Parlor and Tony’s Popcorn Cart.
 
Admission is free, city parking lots $6. History Park is located at 1650 Senter Road (for GPS puposes, use 635 Phelan Avenue, San Jose, CA).
 
   # # # 
 
Upcoming History San José Family Days will include:
 
Saturday, April 20: Earth Day / Arbor Day:  There will be a concert by Linda Tringali, and Archaeology Dig with the Stanford Archaeology Students, and Litter Pick Up of Kelley Park.
Sunday, May 19: Celebrate Sempre Virens 150th Anniversary, visit Andrew Hill and John Muir, and Dig San José: Public Archaeology Day for children at History Park. Admission charged.
Sunday, June 19: Celebrate Father’s Day at History Park as we celebrate Historic Transportation Day with toy trains, hand car and trolley rides, sit in the Wells Fargo Stage Coach and listen to stories about early travel.
Admission charged.
Sunday, July 7:  Gold Rush Family Day:  this family-friendly event at History Park will highlight gold panning actiities for the children, which is also a great opportunity to play in water. Lion dancers will celebrate the contribution of the Chinese people to the Gold Rush. Admission charged.
Sunday, August 25 is the Fandango at the Peralta Adobe Historic Site
Sunday, October 27 is Haunt History Park, celebrating Halloween
Sunday, November 24 is the 236th Happy Birthday San José! Celebration at the Peralta – Fallon Historic Site
Saturday, December 14 is the Children’s Heritage Festival at History Park.
 
For more information call 408 918-1047 or visit www.historysanjose.org
 
   # # # 
 
About History San José: 
History San José is a non-profit organization that collects, preserves and celebrates the stories of diversity and innovation in San José and the Santa Clara Valley. HSJ manages one of the largest and most comprehensive regional history collections in the State of California, from 1784 Spanish governmental records to twenty-first century Silicon Valley technology. 
History San José     1650 Senter Road     San José, CA  95112      408.287.2290
 
Website:  historysanjose.org
Facebook: /historysanjose
Twitter: @historysanjose

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

SJMADE Mini Mart on March 21st and 22nd

It looks like another SJMADE pop-up event featuring local entrepreneurs and artisans is coming next week to San Jose. I wish these events would be more than two days. This is a great way to fill up our vacant retail space until permanent leases come in. If you want to participate as a vendor, all of the information is below. As for everyone else, I'll post the location when I have more info!

San Jose Made (SJMADE)

Be a Vendor at SJMADE Mini Mart at Start Up Shop

Downtown San Jose
75 East Santa Clara Street
San Jose, CA 95112
March 21st, 5p to 8p
March 22nd, 5p to 10p

SJMADE Mini Mart is a smaller version of our typical SJMADE events. This format allows for us to partner with other organizations who also seek to activate vacant spaces throughout San Jose. Smaller-scale vendor shows in inactive San Jose spaces brings life to these places and encourages local business at the same time.

For this mini mart, we partner with the office of District 3 in San Jose to present Start Up Shop--a two-day pop-up installation in a vacant office space in Downtown San Jose. By involving downtown building owners, local independent retail businesses, event-based organizations, and collaborative co-working studios, the office of San Jose's District 3 and SJMADE seeks to encourage creative start-ups, studios, and retailers to start up shop in Downtown San Jose.

Are you a local maker, designer, artist, or independent retail business owner looking to get involved? If so, sign-up to be a vendor!


Interested in being a Mini Mart Vendor?

 Complete your vendor application here >

Along with your completed online application, you must submit your payment information for your booth fee. All applications and booth fees must be submitted by midnight on March 5th.

If you have a questions regarding this application process, contact us at sanjosemade@gmail.com.

Any questions? Email us: sanjosemade@gmail.com.

    
SJMADE, San Jose, CA


San Jose Made (SJMADE) | 1020 The Alameda  | San Jose, CA 95126 | www.sanjosemade.com 

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

New Marshalls Coming to Village Oaks

Village Oaks is a large retail destination planned for South San Jose, off of Cottle Road and Great Oaks Parkway. They have just announced that Marshalls will be a 23,000 sqft anchor tenant in the complex, which will have over 300,000 sqft of retail. There will also be a massive 140,000 sqft Target, a Safeway, Ulta Beauty, Chase Bank, Total Woman Gym & Spa, Five Guys, and Panera Bread, and several other tenants.

The smaller tenants will be arranged along a narrow street, making the project more walkable and Downtownish (think Rivermark in Santa Clara). I can't say that I'm terribly excited about the tenant list so far, but at least the configuration should be good and the new neighborhood--which also includes 2,900 housing units--will be accessible by transit.

Source: SVBJ

Monday, March 11, 2013

Little Italy San Jose is Getting an Italian Coffee Shop!

The good news train for Downtown San Jose continues to get longer and longer. Last week Little Italy San Jose announced a new tenant to join Paesano Ristorante Italiano in Downtown's newest district. Bel Bacio Imported Italian Coffee is going to be serving up premium coffee roasted all the way in Messina Sicily. I'm expecting this coffee to be phenomenal and set a new bar for coffee Downtown.

Soon we should also have news on the Little Italy San Jose sign that will be put up on Julian and an exciting project involving more than just retail in the neighborhood (hint: it will be a mixed-use development). There's a lot to look forward to, can't wait to see what Little Italy will look like within a year or two and I'm already itching to try out Bel Bacio!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Huge News for Little Italy San Jose!!

We are thrilled to announce the signing of Bel Bacio Imported Italian Coffee to
Little Italy San Jose. Little Italy's own Debbie Caminiti and her brother Dan
Buttitta will be serving authentic Premium Italian coffee roasted in Messina
Sicily.

Bel Bacio will be a welcome addition to Paesano Ristorante and The Sabatino
Memorial family resource center. We are very happy for Debbie and Dan and know
that their business will be a social gathering place for the Italian community.

Buona Fortuna!!!

Joshua DeVincenzi Melander
Executive Director Little Italy San Jose


Sunday, March 10, 2013

Cookbook for Special Diets Featured in San Jose

The "Finally... Food I Can Eat!" cookbook is going to be featured as part of the I Can Do It Conference in San Jose, March 16-18th. It seems like most of my friends have at least one food allergy (I have one myself) and I know quite a few people that have Celiac Disease, are diabetic, or are lactose intolerant. This is a cookbook that specifically caters to those with food allergies. You can find more information below and the book is available through all of the standard channels such as Amazon or Barnes & Noble.




About the Book

Are you frustrated and overwhelmed with trying to prepare meals that are free of
wheat, yeast, eggs, dairy, gluten, soy, corn, and sugar?

Are you tired of being on a “special diet”? Why don’t the recipes you make taste
yummy?

Well, here is the cookbook for you! It contains:

• Easy, delicious recipes that will appeal to everyone in the family—and your guests
will never know they are eating allergen-free food.
• A useful introduction and guide to food allergies and intolerances
• A quick guide to natural food chemicals, food additives, food families, and
rotation diets.
• Substitutions and alternatives to common foods that you need to avoid.
• Recipes that are low in sugar and cholesterol and are great for those following
diabetic, candida, allergy-free, or heart-smart diets.

“This cookbook is so well thought out that it likely will inspire the reader to make
these tempting recipes. Shirley has found many creative ways of bringing all kinds
of healthy food into the daily diet, with lots of good ideas on how to combine
them.”
—Dr. Jennifer Armstrong, MD, associate of American Academy of Environmental
Medicine

“Shirley’s gluten-free, blueberry muffins are my favourite, they’re the best.”
—Sophia age 7

About the Author

Shirley Plant has studied in the field of nutrition for many years. Diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and multiple food and environmental allergies, Shirley understands firsthand the difficulties of trying to plan creative, nutritious, and affordable menus while having to avoid such common foods as wheat, dairy, eggs, corn, gluten, and sugar, just to name a few. But through understanding, education, and a keen interest to help people find
food alternatives to fit into their life schedules, Shirley has developed an expertise and reputation in dietary design, customized recipes, and menu-planning.
For more information, please visit www.deliciousalternatives.com.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Saturday Stats: San Jose Ranks in 2013 Small-Business Vitality List

In a ranking of small-business vitality among America's 102 major markets, San Jose came out in 10th place. We ranked just behind NYC and ahead of SF at 13th place. Our 3.56% private sector job growth and rate of 23.83 small businesses per 1,000 residents were the main contributors to the high ranking.


  1. Austin
  2. Oklahoma City
  3. Denver
  4. Raleigh
  5. Salt Lake City
  6. Durham, N.C.
  7. Seattle
  8. Houston
  9. New York City
  10. San Jose
  11. Charlotte
  12. Omaha
  13. San Francisco-Oakland
  14. Boston
  15. Boise, Idaho
  16. Des Moines, Iowa
  17. Dallas-Fort Worth
  18. Portland, Maine
  19. Portland, Ore.
  20. Louisville
  21. Provo, Utah
  22. Miami-Fort Lauderdale
  23. Wichita, Kans.
  24. Tulsa
  25. Lancaster, Pa.
  26. Minneapolis-St. Paul
  27. Bradenton-Sarasota, Fla.
  28. Orlando
  29. New Orleans
  30. Tampa-St. Petersburg
  31. Nashville
  32. Washington
  33. San Antonio
  34. Ogden, Utah
  35. Pittsburgh
  36. Albany, N.Y.
  37. Atlanta
  38. Los Angeles
  39. Bridgeport-Stamford, Conn.
  40. McAllen-Edinburg, Texas
  41. St. Louis
  42. Harrisburg, Pa.
  43. Columbus
  44. Scranton-Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
  45. San Diego
  46. Palm Bay-Melbourne, Fla.
  47. Chicago
  48. Madison, Wis.
  49. Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
  50. Knoxville, Tenn.
  51. Charleston, S.C.
  52. Oxnard-Thousand Oaks, Calif.
  53. Jacksonville
  54. Baltimore
  55. Hartford
  56. Providence
  57. Philadelphia
  58. Indianapolis
  59. Allentown-Bethlehem, Pa.
  60. Cleveland
  61. Cincinnati
  62. Kansas City
  63. Baton Rouge, La.
  64. Honolulu
  65. El Paso, Texas
  66. Columbia, S.C.
  67. Little Rock, Ark.
  68. Phoenix
  69. Colorado Springs
  70. Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.
  71. Grand Rapids, Mich.
  72. Virginia Beach-Norfolk
  73. Rochester, N.Y.
  74. Las Vegas
  75. Buffalo
  76. Greensboro, N.C.
  77. Greenville, S.C.
  78. Syracuse, N.Y.
  79. Jackson, Miss.
  80. Akron, Ohio
  81. Richmond
  82. Youngstown, Ohio
  83. Tucson
  84. New Haven, Conn.
  85. Milwaukee
  86. Detroit
  87. Worcester, Mass.
  88. Chattanooga, Tenn.
  89. Birmingham
  90. Toledo, Ohio
  91. Fresno, Calif.
  92. Stockton, Calif.
  93. Lakeland, Fla.
  94. Sacramento
  95. Springfield, Mass.
  96. Dayton, Ohio
  97. Memphis
  98. Bakersfield, Calif.
  99. Albuquerque
  100. Augusta, Ga.
  101. Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif.
  102. Modesto, Calif.
Source: SVBJ


Friday, March 8, 2013

San Jose Smokes the Nation in Patent Creation

This was going to be a Saturday Stat, but this one is so good I had to set it for today.

The San Jose metro proves again that it is the innovation capital of the world by bringing in a staggering number of patents. The average patent grants per year between 2007 and 2011 were 9,237. SF followed with 7,003 patents, and NY took 3rd place with 6,907 patents. We handily won in raw numbers, but when you look at patents per million residents (patents per capita)... well we pretty much smoked the entire country. The San Jose Area rakes in 5,066 patents per million residents. This is not only triple San Francisco, but it is equal to the per capita patent generation of San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Houston, Dallas, Atlanta, Washington DC, and Boston COMBINED. Yes, that's correct, it take 10 major metropolitan areas in the US to reach the same level of patent generation per capita as San Jose. Another way to look at it, our patent generation is 17 times the national average for US metros.

This is why the brand message San Jose needs to continue to push is Innovation. We shouldn't let San Francisco or any other Silicon Valley wannabe take that word away from us, because that is the single word that I think best describes who we are... and we have the numbers to prove it.

Side-note, we are also getting a patent office of our very own somewhere either in San Jose or near San Jose in the not to distant future which will likely further accelerate patent generation in the area.

Source: SVBJ



Thursday, March 7, 2013

March 2013 Downtown Dimension Highlights

Here are my notes from the latest edition of Downtown Dimension:
  • The VTA wants to "park" some Light Rail trains in St. James Park in order to speed up train service and create new lines in anticipation of BART coming to the South Bay. Concerns of this configuration are blocked views, safety, and congestion in this area.
  • Over Groundwex's next 10 year term, they plan to help fill retail vacancies, put a greater emphasis on safety, increase efficiency with new equipment, beautify key Downtown gateways, and enhance maintenance projects.
  • Vyne Bistro is now open at 110 Paseo de San Antonio [Josh: have tried it, great new addition Downtown!]
  • K.zzang is a new Korean restaurants at 78 S. First.
  • Nemea Greek Taverna is a new flagship Greek restaurant at 96 S. First St. (where E&O used to be). [Josh: looks phenomenal on the inside, even better than E&O with the aesthetics and it will have outdoor seating]
  • EcoMonster is a new retail store bringing handcrafted and eco-conscious products to consumers at 30 N. Third St. 
  • The city is extending high-rise residential incentives to 2016.
  • The next HER city event will be on April 25 and features a fashion show hosted by The Usuals, Lotus Jeans, Brixton Hue, and several others. There will be food, drinks, and a few surprises.
To read the full newsletter, click here!



Wednesday, March 6, 2013

High Speed Rails Wins Alignment Lawsuit

A few years ago the cities of Atherton, Menlo Park, and Palo Alto filed a lawsuit to prevent California High Speed Rail trains from passing through their cities. Basically a few extremely wealthy communities are trying to block a project that will benefit millions of people. Thankfully, last week a judge dismissed the case. The high speed trains will indeed take the most efficient route in the Bay Area, which is from San Jose to San Francisco via the Penninsula (as opposed to San Jose >> Oakland >> San Francisco). Now the next step is actually funding this $40+ billion project.

Source: SJBJ




CAHSTMap_Overview: Click to Enlarge

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

408 Race to the Row

Get fired up for the second annual 408k Race to the Row, which blasts off on March 10th. The race starts in Downtown San Jose, goes down The Alameda, and then winds its way to Santana Row. At the finish line you can earn back all of those calories by partying at the Row, hop on a free luxury bus back to Downtown, and continue partying and saving up calories for the next run!

For more information, click here. Hat tip to Joie for sending this in.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



RACE INFO
Downloadable Race Instructions (just some light reading):
2013 Race Instructions (pdf)

UPS SWEAT CHECK: The fine folks in brown will again be at the starting line to accept your sweats, gear, and unmentionables. Ensure you have time to check your goods, so show up early and look for the beautiful line of UPS trucks adjacent to the starting line.

START: The race starts at HP Pavilion in Downtown San Jose. If you don’t know where this is then just google it. You’re likely from the great Silicon Valley area and you should know all about the google.

COURSE TIME LIMIT: You will need to maintain an 18 minute/mile pace to make the course time cut-off.  All participants remaining on the course beyond this time limit will be asked to use the sidewalk, abide by traffic laws, and continue to the finish line.

FINISH: The finish line is at Santana Row (We’ve mentioned that multiple times because we view as a bit of a selling point. It’s near Stevens Creek Blvd…again try the google)

BUSING: You’re probably wondering, “if it starts downtown and ends at Santana Row then how do I get home?” First off, nice work detective. Now, three options:

(1) Get dropped off at the start and tell your mom to meet you at the Row.
(2) Cool down and run back
(3) Party at Santana Row and take the free shuttles buses back to the pavilion. Our Official Transportation Provider, Royal Coach Tours, will be ready to roll after the race.