
Planning for
growth in the Sacramento region is not a new idea. There was a time when
Sutters Fort sat virtually alone on a knoll amid fields and grazing
lands. Today, the view from the Fort is much different.
Growth, however, was always the areas destiny. As early as
the late 1840s, ambitious plans with a grid filled by streets were drawn for
Sutterville, but the eventual founding of the City of Sacramento usurped
Sutters development plans.
In 1855, when Sacramento was a metropolitan center of 15,000, one
of the areas first great transportation initiatives was completed. The
Sacramento Valley Railroad, developed by Col. Charles Wilson and a young
engineer named Theodore Judah (who later led engineering on the plan to build a
railroad across the Sierra), sent its first locomotive on the 22-mile trek to
Folsom. The SVRRs vice president was another young man, William Tecumsah
Sherman, who in 1848 had helped plan the City of Sacramento but is far more
famed as a Civil War general.
While the Gold Rush brought the most famous influx of new
residents to the area and instantly created burgeoning new towns, it may have
been the Golden Spike that had the greatest long-term effect. When the Union
Pacific and Central Pacific railways were connected at Promontory Point, Utah,
on May 10, 1869, the new transcontinental railroad which terminated in
Sacramento opened the door for the first time to thousands of Easterners who
could now traverse the Sierra Nevada in relative comfort.
Later, railroad companies would offer bargain basement fares to
bring Americans westoften to encourage people to settle on land owned and
developed by the railroads. Railroads also opened the East to California and
the West, meaning that agricultural products that supported the local economy
could now be shipped to new markets.
Just as today, Sacramento has built a reputation for innovation in
planning. In the 1920s, John Nolen, who would later be called The Father
of American City Planning, was hired to shape the growing city. His
designs for the City of Sacramento are important factors in the shape it has
retained to this day.
The construction of Highway 50 to replace Folsom Boulevard and
Interstate 80 to supplant Auburn Boulevard as the primary eastern thoroughfares
had much the same effect as the opening in 1940 of the Wests first
freeway, the Arroyo Seco Parkway (now the Pasadena Freeway), in Los Angeles.
The automobile now made it possible live in outlying cities and in
developmentsdubbed suburbsthat were too far away for
people who worked in the urban area.
More and more, individual towns were becoming part of a larger
overall region with shared interests and economies. Although some enclaves are
now just memories on the map, cities and communities still strive to maintain
their own identities and destinies. Today, however, local governments realize
that the planning decisions they and others make will have effects throughout
the region and that their futures are indelibly linked.
The Blueprint Project, designed to guide the regions growth
through 2050, is the next step in the regions history of planning ahead
to maintain the best possible quality of life. The challenges of meeting the
needs of the regions rapidly growing populationdriven in part by
past planning efforts designed to make the region an attractive place to live
and do businessare large but hardly unprecedented. A process that began
in the middle of the 19th century will undoubtedly continue in the middle of
the 21st when the success of the Blueprint Project is reviewed and new
strategies are employed to carry the region through the end of the century.
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