The Evolution of An Edge City: Irvine, California

“Edge city is an American term for a concentration of business, shopping, and entertainment outside a traditional urban area in what had recently been a residential suburb or semi-rural community. The term was first used in Tom Wolfe’s 1968 novel The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test and popularized in the 1991 book Edge City: Life on the New Frontier by Joel Garreau, who established its current meaning while working as a reporter for the Washington Post.”Wikipedia

Look high, look low, it is hard to find buildings from the past that preserve Irvine’s history.

This is typical of edge cities, which tend to tear down anything that is the least bit old. However, one building in Irvine that is quite old still exists. In fact, it is one of the oldest wood buildings in Orange County. What I am writing about is the building next to the San Joaquin golf course that houses the Irvine Historical Society.

1868_houseThis wood structure was built about 1880 and was the cooking quarters for what was once one of the largest private working ranches in the country, the Irvine Ranch. At one time, the Irvine Ranch covered not only the area currently occupied by the City of Irvine, but covered over one-third of Orange County.

Today the Irvine Ranch still exists but as a land development company, not a working farm. The Irvine Ranch of today includes all or part of the cities of Laguna Beach, Anaheim, Tustin, Orange, Newport Beach, and Irvine.

The Irvine Ranch cooking quarters was not the first wood building on this site. At one time, attached to this cooking wing was the living quarters that James Irvine, founder of the Irvine Ranch, used when he came to southern California from San Francisco to oversee ranch operations. These living quarters, which James Irvine had built in 1868, were the first wood structure built between Anaheim and San Juan Capistrano.

I have heard two stories on how this 1868 structure was destroyed. One is that it was destroyed in a fire. The other is that it was removed to facilitate the grading for the San Joaquin golf course. (If the reason is the second, then this would be prime edge city behavoir. If anyone has information on this, please leave a comment.)

So something of the past has survived in this edge city, and signs that the City of Irvine may be moving away from its tear-down-anything-slightly-old mentality exists. For example, some of the hangars at the former El Toro Marine base (and now the Orange County Great Park) are being converted for other uses instead of being destroyed.

The City of Irvine’s evolution includes the Juanenos (Acagchemem) and Gabrielino Indians dwellings, Spanish and Mexican rancheros, one of the largest grazing ranches in the country and later one of the largest agricultural farm that used cutting-edge farming practices, and one of the country’s largest master-planned community that has been the subject of many books and studies.

The evolution continues today. Former ranch land is being converted into new suburbs; industrial land is being converted into mixed-use urban living, and the former El Toro Marine Air Base is being converted into the Orange County Great Park, a metropolitan park for the twenty-first century. The intention for the Great Park is that it will serve Orange County in a way that is similar to the way Balboa ParkCentral Park, and Golden Gate Park serve their communities.

We will see what the future brings, and I will be documenting some of it on this blog.

For more information on the evolution of Irvine, see my past Redfin post: “Irvine at the Crossroads.” And to read contrasting views on possible development in Irivne, see one of Joel Garreau’s articles and an Irvine Company’s publication.

Tomorrow: a brief description of the Orange County Great Park and current plans for the Great Park development

PHOTO COURTESY THE IRVINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY


A Little History: Remembering Who We Are and Understanding What We Might Become

courthouse-interier-ocAll work and no play makes us all dull boys and girls. Likewise, all numbers…well, you get the idea.

With that in mind, at times, I am going to forget about the housing numbers, statistics, and development news. Instead, I am going to focus on a little of our history.

Our past has a lot to do with who we are as people, and this also is true for cities. Therefore, remembering the past is important to understanding who we are and what we might become.

For this reason, at times, I will write about the history of Orange County, Irvine, and Costa Mesa. Most likely, I will start with Irvine, because I live in Irvine and, therefore, know more about it. But I will get around to Costa Mesa and Orange County in the future.

If any history buffs out there have information that they want to send over here to the Sweet Orange, please do. I am particularly interested in learning more about Costa Mesa. So calling all interested parties: The Costa Mesa Historical Society, The Orange County Historical Society, The Irvine Historical Society, history buffs. Any input?

Note: The photo of the interior of the old Orange County Courthouse is courtesy OC Parks. The courthouse was built in 1901 and is a California State Historic Landmark and a National Register Historic Place. For a look at the exterior of this building, which is one of Orange County’s most interesting and historic buildings, see Rudy M Photography’s photo on Flickr.

Some influential cases decided at the old courthouse:

  • In 1933, People v Termo Corporation: The court ruled that the State of California is entitled to easements for off-shore oil drilling.
  • In 1941, Irvine Company v California Employment Commission: The court ruled that employees of a large agricultural farm were still agricultural workers and, therefore, were not entitled to unemployment insurance.
  • In 1947, People of California v Gollum and Overell: Although the defendants were acquitted, the circumstances of the case lead to new regulations for the sale and purchase of explosives. This trial generated much public attention in its day.
  • In 1965, Chimel v California: New rules for search and arrest were enacted. This case was eventually heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.

 That’s it for this week’s posts.

Monday (unless I change my mind, which is always possible): a little history about one of Orange County’s edge citiesIrvine, California