Downtown Hayward is the original and current city center of Hayward, California, and is home to the current Hayward City Hall, along with the two previous city halls, Alex Giualini Plaza and The Tower at Hayward City Center. The Hayward Fault runs through the area, and is the cause of the two previous city halls being taken out of use.
Its approximate boundaries are Foothill Boulevard to the east, Watkins Street and Hayward BART to the west, Jackson Street to the south, and City Center Drive to the north.[1] Foothill Boulevard was known as "The Golden Strip", a retail business corridor that was built in the 1950s, and housed Capwell's and I. Magnin department stores. The street lost businesses after the opening of Southland Mall in 1964.[2] Parks include Newman Park and The Julio Bras Portuguese Park. San Lorenzo Creek runs through downtown. The Hayward Public Library is located there. "Hayward City Center", located at the northern end of downtown, contains the former Centennial Tower/City Center Building, which served as the city's second City Hall from 1969 to 1991, and is now an abandoned 11 story building, Hayward's second tallest after California State University's Warren Hall. The City Center complex previously contained the now demolished Centennial Hall Convention Center. The bankrupt Mervyn's department store chain's former headquarters is across the street from the City Center mall. The Hayward Area Historical Society operates a museum downtown, which is currently closed to the public until a move is completed.[3] The FBI operates a resident agency in downtown Hayward.[4]
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Cinema Place is a 12,000 square feet (1,100 m2) entertainment and shopping center, comprising a single structure, which opened October 24, 2008.[5] Directly adjacent to the center is a large city run parking garage. The City of Hayward has commissioned 3 large murals, designed by Hayward artist Andrew Kong Knight, decorating the exterior of the garage, featuring scenes from Hollywood and Hayward, which are being executed in 2011.[6] An additional mural by Knight is found at the northern end of The Hayward Strip.[7][8]
The main tenant is a Century Theatre multiplex, which is Hayward's lone movie theater since Mann's Festival Cinemas closed in 2003. In 2011, the Hayward Art Council opened a gallery on the ground floor of the center, in a storefront that has remained unused since the center's opening.[9][10]
Lucky and Safeway operate supermarkets there. California Historical Landmark the Green Shutter Hotel is located downtown. Buffalo Bill's Brewery, founded in 1983 by photographer Bill Owens[11][12], is one of the first brewpubs to open in California since Prohibition, after legislation passed in 1982 legalizing brewpubs again.[13] A Marinello School of Beauty is downtown.[14] The Daily Review newspaper operates from downtown.
The All Saints Catholic Church is located downtown. It operates the Mount Saint Joseph Cemetery. The Hayward Veterans' Memorial Building, built in 1932, is adjacent to the old City Hall building, and is available for public events.[15]
The Route 238 Corridor Improvement Project broke ground July 2010, with an expected completion date of 2012. It will include extensive landscaping, bringing parks and improved traffic flow to the downtown region. The Foothill Boulevard business district will also getting a $2.85 million face-lift, partly through $1.1 million in loans, improving the storefront facades and other amenities.[16]
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