Santa Teresa, San Jose
Santa Teresa | |
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Top: Ramac Park; middle: shops on Village Oaks Dr; apartments on Palmia Ave; bottom: view of the Santa Teresa Hills from Ascent Apartments; apartments on Vía del Oro. | |
Coordinates: 37°13′41″N 121°46′43″W / 37.227948°N 121.778641°W | |
Country | United States |
State | California |
County | Santa Clara |
City | San Jose |
Population (2021) | |
• Total | 56,000 |
Santa Teresa is a neighborhood of San Jose, California, United States, located in South San Jose. Founded in 1834, Santa Teresa was originally established as Rancho Santa Teresa by the Bernal family, a prominent Californio clan. Today, Santa Teresa is largely a residential area, but also home to numerous Silicon Valley tech campuses.
Santa Teresa is the southernmost urban district of San Jose, bordering the largely protected Coyote Valley to its south. It is bound by the Santa Teresa Hills to its south and the Bayshore Freeway (101) to its east.
History
[edit]
Santa Teresa was founded in 1834 as Rancho Santa Teresa, a rancho grant given by Governor José Figueroa to Don José Joaquín Bernal, a retired soldier who came to Alta California as part of the De Anza Expedition in 1776.[1] Prior to receiving the rancho grant, José Joaquín Bernal had already settled in the area since 1826.[1][2] Bernal named the area Santa Teresa after attributing the healing waters of the Santa Teresa Spring to Saint Teresa of Ávila, the 16th century Spanish saint.[2] Rancho Santa Teresa quickly became an important center for Californio life in the southern Santa Clara Valley, attracting vaqueros and their families from the region with regular fiestas featuring Fandango dancing and large feasts.[2]
Following the death of Don José Joaquín, his second son, Don Bruno Bernal, took over the rancho's administration, while his two brothers, Agustín and Juan Pablo, sought businesses ventures outside of Santa Teresa.[2] By the time of the California Gold Rush, Agustín and Juan Pablo were selling their cattle to miners in Gold Country, while Bruno managed affairs at home.[2] Don Bruno became one of the region's most prominent public figures and ran the rancho until his death in 1863.[2] Today, a part of the original rancho is preserved as the Rancho Santa Teresa Historic District, though the original adobe hacienda of the rancho has burned down.
The Treaty of Santa Teresa (Spanish: Tratado de Santa Teresa) was signed at the rancho in 1844, temporarily ending the hostilities between Governor Manuel Micheltorena and the revolters led by former Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado.[3]
Technology in Santa Teresa
[edit]Many technology-related companies have campuses in the Santa Teresa area.
Equinix, an American multinational internet-connectivity company, has their Great Oaks campus situated in the north-eastern corner of Santa Teresa.[4] The company, founded in 1998, boasts 5 data centers in their Great Oaks campus, SV1, opened in 1999, SV5 in 2010, SV10 in 2017, SV11 in 2021, and SV12 in 2024.[5][6][7] There are currently two more Equinix data centers in the process of construction in the Great Oaks campus, SV18 and SV19, with completion expected to be 2026 and 2028, respectively.[8][9]
Western Digital, an American data storage and hard disk drive manufacturing company, has their company headquarters in the northern portion of the Santa Teresa neighborhood. The company's headquarters were moved from Irvine to their Great Oaks campus in April 2017.[10] The Great Oaks campus, which was built by IBM in 1956 and was owned by Hitachi Global Storage Technologies after acquiring IBM's hard disk drive in 2003, became part of Western Digital when HGST was bought for $3.9B USD in March 2012.[11][12]
RAMAC Park is named after the IBM 305 RAMAC, the first computer to use a disk drive, which was developed at the IBM Santa Teresa Lab in the 1950s.[13]
Geography
[edit]

Santa Teresa is located in South San Jose. It is separated in the west from Almaden Valley by the Santa Teresa Hills and located north of Coyote Valley, which separates Santa Teresa from the Madrone neighborhood of Morgan Hill. To the northeast of Santa Teresa is Edenvale and to the northwest is Blossom Valley.
Tulare Hill serves as the barrier between the southern tip of Santa Teresa and Coyote Valley.
It is made up of the ZIP Codes 95119, 95123, 95139, 95193, and the parts of 95138 that are west of Coyote Creek.
The Cottle Transit Village is an Urban Village of Santa Teresa located in the north-central portion of the neighborhood.
Parks and plazas
[edit]
- Santa Teresa County Park
- Palmia Park
- La Colina Park
- Los Paseos Park
- George Page Park
- Ramac Park
- Raleigh Linear Park
- Avenida España Park
- Black Mountain Bowmen
Education
[edit]
Santa Teresa is mostly served by Oak Grove School District and East Side Union High School District, which includes:
- Taylor Elementary School
- Santa Teresa Elementary School
- Bernal Intermediate School
- Santa Teresa High School
Oak Grove School District used to formerly serve the following schools in Santa Teresa:
- Blossom Valley Elementary School (closed 2003)
- San Anselmo Elementary School (closed 2003)
- Glider Elementary School (closed 2018)
The southernmost portions of Santa Teresa are served by the Morgan Hill Unified School District, which operates two schools in Santa Teresa:
- Los Paseos Elementary School
- Martin Murphy Middle School
Transportation
[edit]Santa Teresa is served by two major transportations method, train and bus. VTA serves train and bus access in Santa Teresa, while CalTrain serves a station in northern Santa Teresa.
VTA Light Rail
[edit]Santa Teresa is served by three stations of the VTA light rail.
- Cottle station on Cottle Rd (central Santa Teresa)
- Santa Teresa station on Santa Teresa Blvd (southern Santa Teresa)
- Snell station on Snell Rd (serving both western Santa Teresa and Blossom Valley)

VTA Bus Service
[edit]Santa Teresa is also served by the VTA bus service. It has 5 bus lines that serve Santa Teresa, 2 regular lines, 2 Frequent lines, and 1 Express line.
Stops listed here will be named after adjacent streets, followed by routes served. All stops serve Northbound and Southbound unless otherwise noted.
Bus Stops |
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Landmarks
[edit]- Kaiser San Jose Medical Center
- Santa Teresa County Park
- Rancho Santa Teresa Historic District
- IBM Research Center
Popular culture
[edit]- Santa Teresa is the home of Kinsey Millhone in Sue Grafton's "Alphabet" series of detective novels. However, in the novels Santa Teresa is a fictional town in Santa Barbara County ninety miles north of Los Angeles.
Gallery
[edit]-
Intersection of Charlotte & Raleigh
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Shops on Coronado Ave
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San Jose PD Southern Police Station
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Apartments on Charlotte
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Equinix San Jose campus
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Santa Teresa as seen from the top of Coyote Peak
References
[edit]- ^ a b Santa Clara County Parks: Bernal-Gulnac-Joice Ranch
- ^ a b c d e f Friends of Santa Teresa Park - Newsletter Summer 2020
- ^ San Jose Mercury News - Santa Teresa County Park is a hidden jewel in South San Jose
- ^ "Equinix Data Center in San Jose, California". www.datacenters.com. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ Baxtel. "Equinix San Jose Campus: SV1, SV5, & SV10 Data Centers". baxtel.com. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ "Equinix SV10/11 Colocation, Great Oaks Boulevard". HMHca. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ Baxtel. "Equinix: SV12 Data Center". baxtel.com. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ Baxtel. "Equinix: SV18 Data Center". baxtel.com. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ Baxtel. "Equinix: SV19 Data Center". baxtel.com. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ "Western Digital moves headquarters to San Jose from Irvine". Orange County Register. 2017-04-24. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ Byford, Sam (2012-03-09). "Western Digital completes $4.8b Hitachi GST buyout, becomes world's largest HDD manufacturer". The Verge. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ "IBM Press room - 2002-12-31 Hitachi and IBM Complete Hard Disk Drive Agreement - United States". web.archive.org. 2008-01-31. Retrieved 2025-04-27.
- ^ Cadence Community - RAMAC Park and the Origin of the Disk Drive