Palo Alto is a bustling small city just
south of the Peninsula south of San Francisco. It is home to Stanford
University and hundreds of Silicon Valley technology companies ranging from
Hewlett Packard to tiny startups operating in garages (which is exactly how
HP started). Palo Alto means high tree in Spanish, and refers
to an aging redwood tree at the north end of the city, hard by the CalTrain
tracks at the trestle bridge that crosses the San Francis Quito creek, which
forms the border with Menlo Park in San Mateo County. The 1061-year-old
Coast Redwood which stands 110 feet high and has a based diameter of 90
inches, marks a campsite for the Portola Expedition Party of 1769.Get
around
By bus
Bus service runs through most of the major areas within the city. Routes
are concentrated around El Camino Real and University Avenue. The Palo Alto
Shuttle is free, and serves the otherwise unserved Embarcadero Road
corridor, as well as the VA Hospital.
By bike
Bike lanes nearly everywhere make riding convenient and safe.
By car
Automobiles are definitely the most convenient way to get around, and
parking is plentiful everywhere except the downtown area. Municipal
parking is
complimentary and fairly well dispersed, but usually limited to 2 hours
during the business day. Parking information can be found at
Attractions
• Stanford Linear Accelerator
Center (SLAC), 650-926-2204. M-F, 8AM-5PM.
• Stanford University.
Offers cultural, athletic, natural and educational resources to Palo Alto
visitors. For example, Outdoor Sculpture at Stanford University
includes a very large collection of large scale works by Rodin in garden
immediately adjoining the museum of art. Look for Andy Goldsworthy's
River of Stone a few steps from the museum's front entry. A guided
outdoor sculpture tour is conducted the first Sunday of each month at 2 pm,
rain or shine. The tour lasts about 1.5 hours, and begins at the entrance of
the Main Quad (where The Oval meets Serra Street).
• Baylands Nature Preserve. The 1,940-acre Baylands Preserve brings
you to the edge of San Francisco Bay and is a component of the critical
wetlands needed to preserve wildlife and marine life in the San Francisco
region. A great place to hike, bike, watch birds and enjoy an afternoon. The
Lucy Evans Baylands Nature Interpretive Center has interesting educational
programs for children and adults. Take Embarcadero Road east to the very end
to get there Map .
Activities
• Biking is a
very popular Palo Alto activity. Road and off-road trails are plentiful.
• Walking trails
abound in the hills to the west of Palo Alto. Check out the Arastradero
Preserve and the four-mile walking trail at the 150-foot diameter Stanford
University Radio Telescope, which locals call "the Dish". The trailhead is
at the intersection of Junipero Serra and Stanford Avenue. The public hiking
trails are only accessible during daylight hours. Sorry, dogs are
prohibited.
• The Stanford Theater
A wonderful old theater showing classics from the 1930s through the 1950s.
• Soak in one of eight private bathing rooms at
Watercourse Way .
Extremely relaxing and clean without being sterile, and the soaks are
reasonably priced. Phone is (650) 462-2000. Open daily from 8:30AM-11PM.
Dining
• Bella Luna, 233 University Ave, (650) 322-1846 - Italian
cuisine.
• Buca di
Beppo, 643 Emerson St, (650) 329-0665 - Family style Italian
cuisine, and they do mean family style - one entree will feed multiple
people. Does not accept reservations, so get there early.
• Cabana
Crowne Plaza's 4290 Bistro, 4290 El Camino Real, (650) 857-0787 -
Features perhaps the most sumptuous brunch buffet that you may experience,
weekends only.
• Compadres, 3877 El Camino Real, (650) 858-1141. Offers moderately
priced Mexican food favorites. If you like it spicy, check out the options
at the "Wall of Flame."
• Hobee's, 67 Town
& Country Village, (650) 327-4111 - A moderately priced restaurant with home
California-fusion meals and good vegetarian options. Famous for its
blueberry coffeecake with its eclectic omelet's and its fruit smoothies.
• Mango Cafe, 435 Hamilton Avenue, (650) 325-3229. Caribbean
restaurant with wonderful fruit juice drinks. Order 'The Whole Island' if
you're starving (jerked chicken wings, island rice, and chicken pelao).
• PF
Chang's, Stanford Shopping Center, (650) 330-1782 - Offers
California-style Asian cuisine in a bistro environment.
• Pluto's, 482 University
Ave. (at Cowper), Ph: (650) 853-1556, Fax: (650) 327-9569 - Some of
the tastiest and healthiest sandwiches and salads to be found in the Bay
Area. Anything with roasted turkey is particularly recommended.
• Zibibbo, 430
Kipling (between University and Lytton), (650) 328-6722 -
Mediterranean cuisine.
Get out
Palo Alto makes a good base of operations for visiting the Silicon Valley
and San Francisco, since it lies about halfway between San Jose and SF.
Trips to San Francisco on Caltrain leave frequently and drop you off just
south of downtown. The ride lasts about an hour, and Caltrain's rush-hour
Baby Bullets travel the distance faster.
To the west, the beautiful Coastal Range provides excellent
biking, hiking, and other outdoor sports. Taking Page Mill Road due
west will get you, eventually, to Highway 1 on the beautiful peninsula coast
(although Highways 84 and 92 are preferable, especially the latter's). And
Santa Cruz is accessible from Highway 17, Skyline Boulevard (Highway 35 to
Highway 9), or beautiful Highway 1.
If you're touring universities, the University of California, Berkeley
is just across the bay. Take US-101 north through San Francisco and across
the Bay Bridge to I-580 north, exiting University Avenue. Or by public
transport, take the Stanford Marguerite shuttle to CalTrain and the SAMTrans
"KX" bus to BART. Take the BART train to Downtown Berkeley. (See
511.org for more).
Links
• Official Site of Palo Alto
• Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce |
|
Get in
Accessible by train, bus or automobile from nearby San Francisco (about
25 miles) and San Jose (about 20 miles) airports. US 101 is the primary
highway access, although I-280 also passes through the western edge of Palo
Alto. Palo Alto Municipal Airport, which is a few miles from the
center of the city, serves private aircraft.
Shopping
Palo Alto's main shopping district is on University Avenue between
El Camino Real and Middlefield Road. A second, smaller shopping area is on
California Avenue
between El Camino Real and Alma.
• Stanford Shopping Center,
Sand Hill Road and El Camino Real. A large upscale mall that features
Nieman-Marcus, Nordstrom's, Bloomingdale, Macy's and one hundred and forty
other stores.
Lodging
• Creekside Inn, 3400
El Camino Real, 650-493-2411 - Moderately priced, convenient location.
• Crowne
Plaza Hotel, 4290 El Camino Real, (650) 857-0787
• Motel
6, 4301 El Camino Real, (650) 949-0833, Fax: (650) 941-0782
Drink
• Empire Tap Room, 651 Emerson Street, (650) 321-3030. Bright,
cheery bar considering the sometimes crusty clientele. Excellent wine list
and delicious calamari.
• The Edge, 260 South
California Avenue, (650) 321-6464 - Live entertainment and dancing.
• Miyake, 140 University
Avenue, (650) 323-9449 - Features high energy atmosphere, eighties music and
disco lights, popular with Stanford students; Sake Bomb (shot of sake
dropped into a glass of beer and chugged) is the drink of choice.
Contact
• Apple Store, 451 University Avenue (across the street from
Borders Books). All the computers are on wifi and free to use.
• Palo Alto Cafe, 2675
Middlefield Road. Has a free wifi hotspot. More free wifi spots at
• Free Palo Alto
Wi-Fi Hotspots,
• Palo Alto's Downtown Free Wi-Fi Internet Hotzone,
 |