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San Diego)
| City of San Diego |
|
San Diego Skyline |

Flag |

Seal |
|
| Nickname(s): America's Finest City |
| Motto: Semper Vigilans (Latin: Ever Vigilant) |
Location of San Diego
within San Diego County |
| Country |
United States |
| State |
California |
| County |
San Diego |
| Founded |
July 16, 1769 |
| Incorporated |
March 27, 1850 |
| Government |
| - Type |
Mayor-council |
| - Mayor |
Jerry Sanders (R) |
| - City Attorney |
Michael Aguirre |
| - City Council |
Scott Peters
Kevin Faulconer
Toni Atkins
Tony Young
Brian Maienschein
Donna Frye
Jim Madaffer
Ben Hueso |
| Area |
| - City |
372.1 sq mi (963.6 km²) |
| - Land |
324.3 sq mi (840.0 km²) |
| - Water |
47.7 sq mi (123.5 km²) |
| Elevation |
72 ft (22 m) |
| Population (2006)[1] |
| - City |
1,256,951 (8th) |
| - Density |
3,871.5/sq mi (1,494.7/km²) |
| - Metro |
2,941,454
Including Tijuana: 4,922,723 |
| Time zone |
PST (UTC-8) |
| - Summer (DST) |
PDT (UTC-7) |
| ZIP code |
92101-92117, 92119-92124,
92126-92140, 92142, 92145, 92147, 92149-92155, 92158-92172,
92174-92177, 92179, 92182, 92184, 92186, 92187, 92190-92199 |
| Area code(s) |
619/858 |
| FIPS code |
06-66000 |
| GNIS feature ID |
1661377 |
|
|
| Website: http://www.sandiego.gov/ |
San Diego (pronounced /ˌsændiˈeɪgoʊ/) is a coastal Southern California city located in the southwestern corner of the continental United States. In 2006, the city's population was estimated to be 1,256,951.[1] It is the second largest city in California and the eighth largest city in the United States, by population. It is the county seat of San Diego County.[2] and is the economic center of the San Diego–Carlsbad–San Marcos metropolitan area, the 17th-largest in the United States with a population of 2.9 million as of 2006, and the 21st-largest metropolitan area in the Americas when including Tijuana (See San Diego-Tijuana Metro.).
San Diego County lies just north of the Mexican border—sharing a border with Tijuana—and lies south of Orange County. It is home to miles of beaches, a mild Mediterranean climate and 16 military facilities hosting the United States Navy, the United States Coast Guard and the United States Marine Corps.
The University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and the affiliated UCSD Medical Center combined with nearby research institutes in the Torrey Pines area of La Jolla
make the area influential in biotechnology research. San Diego's
economy is largely composed of agriculture, biotechnology/biosciences,
computer sciences, electronics manufacturing, defense-related
manufacturing, financial and business services, ship-repair and
construction, software development, telecommunications, and tourism.
History
-
The area has long been inhabited by the Kumeyaay people. The first European to visit the region was Portuguese explorer Juan Rodrigues Cabrillo sailing under the Spanish Flag, (1499 - 1543), who sailed his flagship San Salvador from Navidad, New Spain. Cabrillo claimed the bay for the Spanish Empire and named the site San Miguel. In November of 1602, Sebastián Vizcaíno was sent to map the California coast. Arriving on his flagship San Diego, Vizcaíno surveyed the harbor and what are now Mission Bay and Point Loma and named the area for the Catholic Saint Didacus, a Spaniard more commonly known as San Diego. On November 12, 1602, the first Christian religious service of record in Alta California was conducted by Fray Antonio de la Ascensión, a member of Vizcaíno's expedition, to celebrate the feast day of San Diego.
Mission San Diego de Alcalá, July 1979 (Robert E. Nylund)
In 1769, Gaspar de Portolà established the Presidio of San Diego (a military post) overlooking Old Town. Around the same time, Mission San Diego de Alcalá was founded by Franciscan friars under Father Junípero Serra. By 1797, the mission boasted the largest native population in Alta California, with over 1,400 neophytes
living in and around the mission proper. After New Spain won its
independence from the Spanish Empire in 1823, Mission San Diego de
Alcalá's fortunes declined in the 1830s after the decree of secularization was enacted, as was the case with all of the missions under the control of Mexico. In 1847 San Diego was a destination of the 2,000-mile (3,200 km) march of the Mormon Battalion which built the city's first courthouse with brick.
After the Battle of San Pasqual, the end of the Mexican-American War, and the gold rush of 1848,
San Diego was designated the seat of the newly-established San Diego
County and was incorporated as a city in 1850. In the years before World War I, the Industrial Workers of the World labor union conducted a free speech fight in San Diego, arousing a brutal response (see San Diego Free Speech Fight.)
Significant U.S. Naval presence began in 1907 with the establishment
of the Navy Coaling Station, which gave further impetus to the
development of the town. San Diego hosted two World's Fairs, the Panama-California Exposition in 1915, and the California Pacific International Exposition in 1935. Many of the Spanish/Baroque-style buildings in the city's Balboa Park
were built for these expositions, particularly the one in 1915.
Intended to be temporary structures, most remained in continuous use
until they progressively fell into disrepair. All were eventually
rebuilt using castings of the original facades to faithfully retain the
architectural style.
After World War II, the military played an increasing role in the local economy, but post-Cold War
cutbacks took a heavy toll on the local defense and aerospace
industries. The resulting downturn led San Diego leaders to seek to
diversify the city's economy, and San Diego has since become a major
center of the emerging biotechnology industry. It is also home to telecommunications giant Qualcomm.
San Diego's Gaslamp Quarter
Downtown San Diego has been undergoing an urban renewal since the early 1980s, beginning with the opening of Horton Plaza, the revival of the Gaslamp Quarter, and the construction of the San Diego Convention Center.
The Centre City Development Corporation (CCDC), San Diego's downtown
redevelopment agency, has transformed what was a largely abandoned
downtown into a glittering showcase of waterfront skyscrapers, expensive live-work loft developments, five-star hotels, and many cafes, restaurants, and boutiques.
The North Embarcadero is slated to have parks in addition to a
waterfront promenade. And Balboa Park will be linked to downtown with a
view corridor. The recent boom in the construction of condos and
skyscrapers has brought with it a gentrification
frenzy, and some people are concerned that speculators have played too
big a role in the condo market downtown. In the meantime, the city is
committed to a "smart growth"
development scheme that would increase density along transit corridors
in older neighborhoods (the "City of Villages" planning concept.) Some
neighborhoods are resisting this planning approach, but "mixed-use development" has had its successes, especially the award-winning Uptown Shopping Center in Hillcrest.
The latest accomplishment of CCDC has been the recent inauguration of PETCO Park. The once-industrial East Village adjacent to the new ballpark is now the new frontier in San Diego's downtown urban renewal.
A series of scandals has rocked the city in recent years. With
mounting pressure aggravated by underfunding of pensions for city
employees that began prior to his administration, Mayor Dick Murphy, in
April 2005, announced his intention to resign by mid-July. Two city
council members, Ralph Inzunza and deputy mayor Michael Zucchet — who was to take Murphy's place — were ultimately convicted of extortion, wire fraud,
and conspiracy to commit wire fraud for taking campaign contributions
from a strip club owner and his associates, allegedly in exchange for
trying to repeal the city's "no touch" laws at strip clubs. Both
subsequently resigned. The judge later set aside (overturned) the
conviction in Zucchet's case.
On November 28, 2005, U.S. Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham resigned over a bribery scandal. Cunningham represented California's 50th congressional district,
which mostly lies outside (north) of the city of San Diego proper. He
is currently serving a one-hundred-month prison sentence.
Geography
- See also: Beaches in San Diego, California and Parks in San Diego, California
The city of San Diego itself has deep canyons separating its mesas,
creating small pockets of natural parkland scattered throughout the
city. The same canyons give parts of the city a highly segmented feel,
creating literal gaps between otherwise proximal neighborhoods and
contributing to a low-density, car-centered built environment. Downtown San Diego is located on San Diego Bay. Balboa Park lies on a mesa to the northeast. It is surrounded by several dense urban communities and abruptly ends in Hillcrest to the north. The Coronado and Point Loma peninsulas separate San Diego Bay from the ocean. Ocean Beach is on the west side of Point Loma. Mission Beach and Pacific Beach lie between the ocean and Mission Bay, a man-made aquatic park. La Jolla, an affluent community, lies north of Pacific Beach. Mount Soledad
in La Jolla offers views from northern San Diego County to Mexico.
Mountains rise to the east of the city, and beyond the mountains are
desert areas. Cleveland National Forest
is a half-hour drive from downtown San Diego. Numerous farms are found
in the valleys northeast and southeast of the city. San Diego County
has one of the highest counts of animal and plant species that appear
on the endangered species list among counties in the United States.[3]
Climate
-
San Diego has a temperate Mediterranean climate (Koppen climate classification CSb).
It enjoys mild, Dry-Summer subtropical, sunny weather throughout the
year. Average monthly temperatures range from about 57 °Fahrenheit
(14°C) in January to 72 °Fahrenheit (22°C) in July, although late
summer and early autumn are typically the hottest times of the year.
The average annual daily temperature is 62.6° Fahrenheit. Snow and ice
are virtually nonexistent in the wintertime, typically occurring only
inland from the coast when present. "May gray and June gloom", a local
saying, refers to the way in which San Diego sometimes has trouble
shaking off the marine layer, a cloudy layer typically higher in the
atmosphere than fog, that comes in during those months. Temperatures
soar to very high readings only on rare occasions, chiefly when
easterly winds bring hot, dry air from the inland deserts (these winds
are called "Santa Anas").
The record highest temperature at the airport is 111°F (44°C) on
September 26, 1963, and the record lowest temperature is 29°F (-2°C) on
January 4, 1949.[4] The National Weather Service reports that San Diego's all-time lowest temperature was 25°F (-4°C) on January 7, 1913.[5]
The National Climatic Cente