Claremont Resort
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The Claremont Resort & Spa is an historic hotel that straddles the border between Berkeley and Oakland. It offers scenic views of San Francisco Bay. The resort currently has 279 guest rooms, 20,000 square foot spa, 10 tennis courts, and 22 acres of landscaped gardens and an award winning spa. Romantic stories tell that it was once won in a poker game.
The Claremont Resort opened in 1915 as the Claremont Hotel, named for the Claremont district in which it was situated. It was constructed by a group of real estate developers associated with the Key System who had already opened up another large hotel in Oakland at Grand Avenue and Broadway called the "Key Route Inn". The Key Route Inn, which burned down in the early 1930s, featured the convenience of a transbay electric rail line running through it (eventually designated the "B" line), and similarly, a transbay line was run right to the doors of the Claremont Hotel (eventually designated the "E" line), approaching from between the tennis courts. The tennis courts still exist to this day, but the tracks were removed in 1958 when the Key System ended rail service. Thus, Claremont Hotel guests not only had a magnificent view of San Francisco, but they could also go there directly.
The Claremont faced destruction by the 1991 Oakland firestorm, but the flames were stopped just short of the hotel.
The main hotel building is entirely in Oakland. However, the southwestern corner of the property owned by the resort falls within the city limits of Berkeley.[1] Part of this section has been leased to the Berkeley Tennis Club since 1917.[2] The rest of it is part of the resort's gardens and parking area, and is used as the resort's mailing address (44 Tunnel Road, Berkeley CA 94705).