The Bay area peninsula is also the home of Silicon Valley. Several technology companies are available to view in 3D, including of course, the Googleplex in Mountain View.
Sports fans might be interested to check out the HP Pavillion, where the San Jose Sharks play, as well as AT&T Park, home of the 2010 worldseries champion, SF Giants. Music lovers may also want to view the Oracle Arena in Oakland and Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View. If you’re starting college soon, take a virtual tour of the Stanford and UC Berkeley campuses.
Of course, this is just a small sample of the several thousands of buildings you’ll find in the area. You can check out an expanded tour we created, or you can open up Google Earth and explore for yourself. As you go on your virtual tour, you may notice that several buildings were created by users, who continue to be an integral part of our 3D building efforts. For example, supermodeler, PeterX created nearly 1,000 buildings around the Bay Area, including the NASA Ames Research Center.
If you’d like to get involved in modeling your town (or any other location), we have several free (and easy!) tools to get you started. With Google Building Maker, you can create and contribute a building in as little as 10 minutes. And if you’d like to refine your building, bring it into Google SketchUp for fine-tuning. Everyday, we are working on adding more 3D cities to Google Earth as part of our larger mission to organize the planet’s geographic information and make it accessible to all. Happy touring! Posted by Gopal Shah, Google SketchUp team
Cool stuff for sure.
ReplyDeleteI love what Google does, so don't get me wrong here. But exception must be taken to the named geographic context here. Being a 2nd generation Bay Area native and a geography, I can tell you that there is no place called "the California Bay Area". There is no California Bay, and thus no CA Bay Area. It is San Francisco Bay Area.
It could potentially be "California's Bay Area", as most California's know the SF Bay Area as simply the Bay Area.
I know Google Geo has geographers, and you know a few things about place names, right?