Northside, Berkeley, California

The Graduate Theological Union is located one block west of Euclid Avenue, in an area nicknamed Holy Hill.

Two years later, the entire tract was purchased for $4,000 in gold by banker Frank M. Wilson, who began to sell lots for houses.

Prominent club members included Maybeck, Charles Keeler, Benjamin Ide Wheeler, and John Galen Howard.

The cradle of the architectural style known as the First Bay Region Tradition, Daley's Scenic Park lost hundreds of buildings in the September 17, 1923, Berkeley Fire.

The fire survivors are concentrated in a triangle along the southeastern slopes of the tract, where one can find houses designed by Maybeck, Julia Morgan, Ernest Coxhead, and A.C. Schweinfurth — influential architects of this movement.

Hoyt Hall, one of the student cooperatives in Northside
Etcheverry Hall, home of the Mechanical Engineering department
The campus of the Pacific School of Religion , one of several seminaries in the neighborhood