Los Gatos

Los Gatos is a town in Santa Clara County, near San Jose, California in the foothills of the Santa Cruz mountains.

Understand

The town's founding dates to the mid-1850s with the building of a flour operation, Forbes Mill, by James Alexander Forbes along Los Gatos Creek. The mill's two-story stone storage annex has been preserved as a museum just off of Main Street.

The settlement that was established in the 1860s was originally named for the mill, but the name was changed to Los Gatos after the Spanish land grant. The town was incorporated in 1887 and remained an important town for the logging industry in the Santa Cruz Mountains through the end of the 19th century. In the early 20th century, the town became a thriving agricultural town with apricots, grapes and prunes being grown in the area. Along with much of the Santa Clara Valley, Los Gatos became a suburban community for San Jose beginning in the 1950s, and the town was mostly built-out by the 1980s.

Downtown Los Gatos has retained and restored many of its Victorian-era homes and commercial buildings. Other notable buildings are the Forbes Mill annex, dating to 1880 and now housing a history museum; Los Gatos High School which dates from the 1920s; and the Old Town Shopping Center, formerly the University Avenue School (the school was established in 1882; the current buildings date to 1923).

A number of brick buildings in Downtown Los Gatos were destroyed or heavily damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, though the district was quickly rebuilt and has made a full recovery.

Get in

  • San Francisco International Airport (SFO IATA) 40 Miles north of Los Gatos
    • From airport, take US 101 S towards San Jose
    • Merge onto CA-85 S
    • Head south on CA-85 S to CA-17 S
    • Head south on CA-17 S to Los Gatos
  • San Jose International (SJC IATA) 11 Miles from Los Gatos
    • Take I-880 S towards Santa Cruz
    • Continue on CA-17 S to Los Gatos

Get around

Transit in Los Gatos is largely automobile-based, along with a significant amount of pedestrian and bicycle traffic. However, if you do not wish to drive, walk, or ride a bicycle, then there is really only one alternative, and that is VTA (Valley Transportation Authority). This organization runs all public transit for the Santa Clara valley area, hence the name. The VTA operates many bus lines along with three light rail train lines, but, if your intent is only to get around Los Gatos, then the buses are all you need to think about. There are two lines that serve Los Gatos, line 48 and line 49. Both serve the same general loop around the town, in opposite directions, and both convene at the Winchester Transit Center/Light Rail station in nearby Campbell. Fares vary based on age, and there are several pass options available. Details are available at the VTA website.

See

  • 🌍 NUMU - New Museum Los Gatos, 106 E. Main St, +1 408-354-2646. W 1PM-5PM, Th 11AM-8PM, Fr-Su 11AM-5PM. The former Los Gatos Art Museum moved to a new home in 2014 and features over 2,000 objects relating to the art and history of Los Gatos and its residents. $9 adults, under 18 free.

Do

  • Byington Winery and Vineyards.
  • David Bruce Winery.
  • Castle Rock State Park.
  • Silver Mountain Vineyards.
  • Burrell School Vineyards & Winery.
  • Castle Rock Falls.
  • Vasona Lake County Park.
  • Los Gatos Creek Trail. Hike, bike, jog 10 miles from Lexington Reservoir to San Jose. Access the trail at 🌍 E Main and Maple Pl, 🌍 Miles Ave, 🌍 Oak Meadow Park, and 🌍 Vasona Lake County Park.

Buy

Eat

  • Dio Deka
  • Icing On the Cake
  • Forbes Mill Steakhouse
  • Manresa
  • Aldo Ristorante & Bar
  • Sushi on the Run
  • Fleur de Cocoa
  • T-Birds Pizza of Los Gatos
  • Wine Cellar
  • Los Gatos Cafe

Drink

Sleep

Go next

Routes through Los Gatos

San Jose Campbell  N  S  Scotts Valley Santa Cruz
Mountain View Saratoga  N  S  San Jose END
Santa Cruz Saratoga  W  E  END


gollark: The number is from Wikipedia, which says that 600000 of those are people who are already there and who are granted legal status.
gollark: Immigration to America is a million a year, which is, what, 0.3% of the population.
gollark: The debate has been framed as "keep the existing very broken system" or "have the government pay for it all".
gollark: I'd expect that warships are fairly expensive.
gollark: The UK's is... somewhat less bad, as at least recently had a vaguely credible third party, and it doesn't have a system quite as bad as the electoral college, at least.
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