When architect Julia Morgan took on the redesign and expansion of the modest, turn of the century columbarium on the hill at the end of Piedmont Avenue in Oakland, she brought with her a small army of local artisans, architectural treasures from Europe, and her trademark eclectic vision.
The resulting winding walkways and terraced indoor gardens, designed with Spanish-Moorish Gothic flourishes reminiscent of Alhambra, makes for an exceptionally beautiful environment to to house the dead.
Founded in 1909 as a much smaller structure, the growing population and popularity of cremation led to the expansion of the columbarium in 1928. The legendarily tireless Julia Morgan was California's first licensed female architect, educated at University of California at Berkeley and L'École des Beaux-Arts in Paris before settling in the Bay Area. She was already engaged in a variety of projects, including William Randolph Heart's "Castle" in San Simeon, but she attacked the new project with enthusiasm. She sent her artist and assistant Doris Day to Europe in search of antiquities to embellish her vision, and brought in local experts in concrete construction, mosaic work and stained glass to bring it to life.
Thousands of tiny niches filled with urns, many shaped like books, surrounding gardens and quiet patio-like rooms, gives the impression of a vast, light filled library.
More modern expansions add to the overall eclectic impression - from an area that was transformed from one of Oakland's early trolley stations to Aztec-inspired additions made by Frank Lloyd Wright protogee Aaron Green.
The Chapel of the Chimes has a performing arts history and today the Chapel is home to regular musical performances including Jazz music and winter and summer solstice performances.
The Gregorian cloister holds pages of illuminated manuscripts from 1550, and the small bible collection contains a page from a 1453 Gutenberg Bible.
