BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171446Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251107
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591925292
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171446Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251108
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591926317
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171446Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251109
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591927342
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171446Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251110
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591928367
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171446Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251111
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591930416
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171446Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251112
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591931441
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251113
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591932466
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251114
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591934515
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251115
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591935540
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251116
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591937589
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251117
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591938614
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251118
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591940663
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251119
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591941688
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251120
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591943737
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251121
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591944762
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251122
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591946811
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251123
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591947836
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251124
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591949885
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251125
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591950910
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251126
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591951935
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251127
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591952960
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251128
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591953985
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251129
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591955010
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251130
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591956035
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251201
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591957060
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251202
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591958085
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251203
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591959110
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251204
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591961159
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251205
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591962184
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251206
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591963209
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251207
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591964234
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251208
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591966283
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251209
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591967308
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251210
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591968333
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251211
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591970382
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251212
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591971407
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251213
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591972432
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251214
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591973457
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251215
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591974482
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251216
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591975507
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251217
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591977556
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251218
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591978581
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251219
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591979606
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251220
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591980631
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251221
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591982680
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251222
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591983705
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251223
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591984730
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251224
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591986779
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251225
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591987804
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251226
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591988829
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171447Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251227
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591990878
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251228
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591991903
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251229
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591993952
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251230
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591994977
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251231
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591996002
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260101
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591997027
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260102
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591998052
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260103
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225591999077
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260104
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225592000102
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260105
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225592001127
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225592002152
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Community Engagement or Volunteering,Exhibitions, Performances, 
 Installations,Social Events and Gatherings
DESCRIPTION:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freew
 ays \n\nWho once lived in the neighborhood where I-280 and CA-87 intersect?
  \n\nIn the mid 1960s assessors working for the California Department of Tr
 ansportation (Caltrans) took reference photos of each property that would b
 e purchased and destroyed to make way for the I-280 freeway. \n\nBeneath I-
 280 features a selection of newly digitized photographs that capture street
  life in the neighborhood and archival materials. \n\nThe exhibition aims t
 o visualize the lost neighborhoods\, lift up stories of people who lost the
 ir homes to freeway construction\, and to invite further public dialogue ab
 out this history.\n\nOpening Reception\, Panel Discussion\, and Community C
 onversation \n\nNovember 13\, 2025 I 5-7 p.m. \n\n2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gall
 ery & Room 225\n\nThis exhibition serves as a reminder of the social costs 
 of mid-century urban planning and freeway construction\, as planners and co
 mmunities today work to retrofit our car-centric urban landscape into equit
 able\, greener\, walkable neighborhoods.\n\nThe “ Beneath I-280” in the DiN
 apoli Gallery exhibition was curated and produced by Bennett Williamson\, ‘
 25 MUP\, a recent alumnus of the Masters of Urban Planning program\, in the
  School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental Studies at San Jose State Un
 iversity with curatorial direction and marketing support by Marketing Commu
 nications and Relations Analyst Lesley Seacrist\, ‘18 MA Communications Stu
 dies\, of the SJSU King Library. \n\n\nExplore the digital website at tiny.
 sjsu.edu/280\n\nThe Beneath I-280 online exhibition produced by Leila Ullma
 nn\, Maxwell Friedman ‘23 MS Urban Planning\, Bennett Williamson\,‘25 MUP a
 nd Matthew Schroeder\, ‘25 MUP\n\nFaculty supervision and mentorship by Ric
 k Kos and Gordon Douglas\, School of Planning\, Policy and Environmental St
 udies with support from the School of Policy\, Planning and Environmental S
 tudies and the SJSU’s Mineta Transportation Institute.  Funding for this re
 search was provided by the Mineta Transportation Institute through a grant 
 from the US Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center
 s program (Grant # 69A3551747127).\n\nExplore the digital space that welcom
 es visitors to ask who once lived in the neighborhood that is now I-280 and
  SR-87 in San Jose? Discover personal testimonies\, history\, an immersive 
 map\, pages from the archives\, images\, and immersive stories at tiny.sjsu
 .edu/280.\n\nThis project looks at and was designed and researched upon the
  unceded land of the Muwekma and Tamyen Ohlone people who are currently see
 king federal recognition for their ancestral connection and sovereignty to 
 the land. Read more at sjsu.edu/diversity/land-acknowledgement
DTSTAMP:20260416T171448Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260107
GEO:37.335691;-121.885256
LOCATION:King Library\, 2nd Floor\, DiNapoli Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Beneath I-280: Excavating a Neighborhood Lost to San José Freeways 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51225592003177
URL:https://events.sjsu.edu/event/beneath-i-280-excavating-a-neighborhood-l
 ost-to-san-jose-freeways
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
