Paseo de César Chávez

Paseo de César Chávez
Part ofSan Jose State University
NamesakeCésar Chávez
TypePedestrian paseo
Length0.2 mi (0.32 km)
LocationSan Jose State University,
San Jose, California
Coordinates37°20′09″N 121°52′53″W / 37.3357°N 121.8815°W / 37.3357; -121.8815
Construction
Commissioned1993
Construction start1994
Completion1996

The Paseo de César Chávez is a pedestrian paseo in Downtown San Jose, spanning across San Jose State University's campus.

History

Arch of Dignity, Equality, and Justice, 2008 by Judy Baca

Paseo de César Chávez was developed from 1994–1996 by San Jose State University, along with the Paseo de San Carlos and the 9th Street Paseo, as a part of a major campus revitalization plan. The paseo was created by the pedestrianization of San Carlos Street between 4th and 10th Streets.[1] It was named in honor of the famed California civil rights activist César Chávez.

Paseo de César Chávez was laid out to serve as the primary north-south pedestrian axis through San Jose State University's campus.[2] Because of the Diaz Compean Student Union, it has become an important focal point for events and gatherings on the SJSU campus.[3]

In 2008, the Arch of Dignity, Equality, and Justice, a memorial by Judy Baca to César Chávez, the namesake of the paseo, was unveiled by Dolores Huerta, noted California civil rights activist and contemporary of Chávez.[4]

Location

Diaz Compean Student Union

Paseo de César Chávez is located in central Downtown San Jose. spanning across San Jose State University's campus from San Salvador Street in the south to San Fernando Street in the north. It follows the former alignment of 7th Street

The paseo intersects the Paseo de San Carlos, the main east-west axis on campus.

It is within walking distance of Paseo de San Antonio station and Santa Clara Street station, on the VTA light rail.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Our History". alumni.sjsu.edu.
  2. ^ City of San José - Strategy 2000
  3. ^ San Jose Spotlight - Closing Busy San Jose Streets Would Provide Major Streets
  4. ^ Spartan Daily - César E. Chávez Monument Unveiled