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<br />visible, and assist residents and visitors in visualizing the city's structure and layout. Some areas lack <br />quality maintenance and are in need of upgrades. The design and maintenance of structures and <br />improvements within these areas will playa critical role in shaping Pleasanton's character in years to <br />come. <br /> <br />Historic Resources <br /> <br />The Downtown and surrounding residential neighborhoods contain most of Pleasanton's recognized <br />historic resources. However, there are other structures, including the Alviso Adobe and Century <br />House, which serve as reminders of Pleasanton's heritage of more than a century and a half. <br />Pleasanton has retained some of its early Spanish and Mexican roots not only in buildings such as the <br />Alviso Adobe, but in other names. For example, the City named Bernal Avenue for its first Mexican <br />settler - Augustin Bernal, while Pleasanton residents still refer to "creeks" as "arroyos" and students at <br />Amador Valley High School as "Dons" - meaning "sirs" in Spanish. The City has recognized over <br />80 individual buildings as historically significant. Historic resources are discussed in more detail in the <br />Cultural Resources section of the Conservation and Open Space Element. <br /> <br />Many heritage trees also assist in giving Pleasanton a unique character and image, often missing from <br />other communities. Walnut trees hark back to Pleasanton's agricultural past while sycamore, valley <br />oak, black locust, elm, ash and other trees evoke Pleasanton's small-town heritage. <br /> <br />Pleasanton's Downtown remains a treasure that most older but growing communities have long since <br />lost. It reflects the city's heritage and is a source of pride to its residents. Older commercial and <br />residential buildings lend richness to the area, and new development has generally been designed to <br />complement the older structures and reinforce the small-scale character. The historic buildings, street <br />trees, many restaurants, special paving, and street furniture, along with unique shops, all enhance the <br />pedestrian scale and attractiveness of Downtown Pleasanton. Entryways to the Downtown, consisting <br />of bridge crossings and well-landscaped streets, are distinctive with the potential for even further <br />strengthening. In addition, Downtown is the location of public buildings providing services and <br />information to residents; these include City Hall, the Library, the Veterans Memorial Building, and the <br />Amador-Livermore Valley Historical Society Museum. <br /> <br />Residential Neighborhoods <br /> <br />Residential neighborhoods are the heart of Pleasanton. The neighborhoods perform a major role in <br />what makes Pleasanton an attractive place to live, work, and play. Each neighborhood has a unique <br />character, from the semi-rural Happy Valley, to the more conventional suburban homes in Pleasanton <br />Valley, to the Victorian and bungalow architecture of residential streets around the downtown. In <br />general, Pleasanton neighborhoods show a pride of ownership as reflected in improvements, such as <br />home additions, and a high level of home maintenance. Neighborhoods consist not only of the <br />residential buildings, but natural features (e.g. hills, creeks, and open space) and the physical <br />arrangement of neighborhood amenities such as roads, schools, parks, playgrounds, and shopping <br /> <br />Community Character 011607 clean <br /> <br />10-5 <br /> <br />1/3/2007 <br />