Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District (LVJUSD) is a public school district located in Livermore, California, United States. It is located in Alameda County. As of July 2025, the superintendent is Torie Gibson, and the school board is composed of Deena Kaplanis, Christiaan VandenHeuvel, Steven Drouin, Emily Prusso, and Craig Bueno.
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894 m
Hagemann Ranch Historic District is a 19th-century historic district containing a farmhouse and ranch located in Livermore, California. Within the district, the agricultural past in Livermore Valley can be remembered. It is owned and managed by the Livermore Heritage Guild, and is open to the public once a month.
The Hagemann Ranch Historic District has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since January 10, 2008; and a California Historical Landmark since January 10, 2008.
1.6 km
Granada High School is a public high school located at 400 Wall Street in Livermore, California, United States. It is part of the Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District. Granada was established as the town's second comprehensive public high school in response to significant population growth in the 1960s. Livermore High School was the first high school in the city, and is the cross-town rival of Granada. The name Granada is a Spanish word meaning "pomegranate". The school's official newspaper is called The Pomegranate, which is published monthly. The school mascot is a matador.
1.9 km
The Mocho Subbasin is the largest of the groundwater subbasins in the watershed of the Livermore Valley in Northern California. This subbasin is bounded to the west by the Livermore Fault Zone and to the east by the Tesla Fault. Some groundwater flow occurs across these fault boundaries, but flows are discontinuous below a depth of fifty feet across the Tesla Fault and south of the Arroyo Mocho channel across the Livermore Fault. Surface watercourses in this unit include Arroyo Valle and Arroyo Seco.
2.0 km
Donut Wheel is a doughnut shop. It was established in 1962, and is a landmark in Livermore, California. It is located at the intersection of the city's four quadrants.
The Donut Wheel was started in 1962 by Jack and Jean Weil, the same year they moved to Livermore from San Francisco. The Donut Wheel got its name from a suggestion from a man who worked with Jack at Stemple's. He said that he should call it the Donut Wheel because that is how people pronounced his name, “wheel” instead of Weil. Jack and Jean sold Jack's Donut Wheel in 1972. Since then it has changed hands a few times, but kept the name.
The building was erected in 1941, as a Purity grocery store. It was remodeled in 1958 by Hans J. Schiller, and is an example of Googie architecture. Schiller was a German architect who remodeled 80 Purity stores throughout California, having fled Nazi Germany to Mandatory Palestine and then established himself in Marin County after World War II. Before the grocery store, the site was occupied by an 1800s building called the Washington Hotel.
The building is single-storied and is shaped like a large Quonset hut with a zig-zag concrete roof extending off of the long side, facing a parking lot. It has large rectangular-shaped windows.
It is currently managed by Savanna Taing, the daughter of previous owners Mary Naryung Tang and Mok Kim Tang, who immigrated to the United States from Cambodia in 1987. They learned donut-making from relatives who worked at Bob's Donuts in Palo Alto, California
2.1 km
Livermore is a train station in downtown Livermore, California.
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Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District
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12,956 students enrolled in schools in the district in the 2022-2023 school year. In addition to Livermore, it includes a portion of Dublin and a very small portion of Pleasanton. The district has a $138 parcel tax, last renewed in 2022 for seven years.