a luxury property presented by josh dickinson
131 avenida drive, berkeley sold for $865,00

Details

DETAILS
Beds: 4
Baths: 3.5
​Year Built: 1939
Square Feet: 1540 sf
Lot Square Feet: 5829 sf

Welcome home to this 4BR, 3.5BA Colonial, filled with California history and brimming with potential! Offered for sale for the first time in over half a century, this unique property was the home to the granddaughter of California’s 18th governor, Henry Harrison Markham. The main level features a grand center entrance, living room, formal dining room, half bathroom and kitchen with access to the deck and yard. The upstairs includes an owners’ suite, along with two additional bedrooms and a hall bathroom. The lower level offers upside with a bedroom and bathroom, as well as a utility room which could serve as a family room. The expansive yard, anchored by a mighty redwood, is terraced upslope with multiple areas to garden, meditate and survey your property from an upper deck. 
 
The property is located in a sylvan setting around the corner from Berkeley’s Terrace View Park. Only moments from UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, the property is also conveniently accessible to downtown Berkeley BART via AC Transit 65, Tilden Park and various locations in Lamorinda without ever taking the freeway! 
 

Neighborhood

Berkeley is a city that transcends its small population. While it is only the 30th largest city in California (and only 4th largest in Alameda County!), Berkeley is world renowned for academic achievement, free speech and the arts. Originally part of northern Oakland Township, the new name was adopted in 1866 after Anglican Bishop George Berkeley and applied to both the town and the College of California's new location along Strawberry Creek (later known as UC Berkeley).

Berkeley grew immensely following the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake, and again during WWII with many wartime jobs in the area at places like the Kaiser Shipyards in Richmond. Later, the city became synonymous with social change and political activism, as the hippie movement spilled out of San Francisco in the late 1960s. Berkeley was the center of national attention in 1974 when Patty Hearst was kidnapped from her apartment at 2603 Benvenue Avenue by the Symbionese Liberation Army.

Today, UC Berkeley is one of the world's top universities. The Gourmet Ghetto, inspired by places like Chez Panisse and Peet's Coffee, is a premier food destination. Brilliant masterpieces from architects Bernard Maybeck and Julia Morgan abound. Coupled with its natural amenities from the Berkeley Hills to San Francisco Bay, Berkeley is one of the most desirable places to live in the US, if not the world!