Almanac note · History and culture
UC Irvine turned ranch land into a campus around a green center
UC Irvine opened in 1965 on former ranch land, with early planning that placed the campus around what became Aldrich Park.
Irvine can feel planned from the street, but UC Irvine shows that planning in a more walkable way. The campus began on former ranch land, and it opened to students in 1965.
The early timeline is very Irvine. Orange County was chosen for a new University of California campus in 1957. The Irvine Company transferred 1,000 acres to the University of California in 1960. William Pereira worked on the campus plan, and Daniel G. Aldrich became the founding chancellor.
The campus was not dropped into a finished city. It helped shape the city that grew around it. Early photos and memories describe a young campus with new buildings rising from open ranch land. That mix of open land, big planning, and new public education is a major part of Irvine’s identity.
Aldrich Park helps make the idea visible. The campus is organized around the green center, so the park works like a quiet middle instead of leftover space. Students, faculty, visitors, trees, paths, and campus buildings all circle around it.
UCI belongs in Irvine’s local story as well as a school guide. The campus shows one of the city’s big turns: ranch land becoming neighborhoods, research labs, jobs, and a large public university near the center of the map.
Where to see it
UC Irvine campus and Aldrich Park in Irvine.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 3, 2026
California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.
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Connected places
Where it fits on the map
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Related notes
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These are picked from nearby places, shared tags, and the same California topic shelf.
Irvine grew from ranch land into a planned city
Irvine's city shape comes from ranch land, UC Irvine planning, villages, greenbelts, business areas, and a master plan drawn before incorporation.
Read next →Irvine's historical museum keeps one ranch house piece standing
The Irvine Historical Museum sits in an old San Joaquin Ranch building, giving the planned city a small, physical link to its ranch past.
Read next →Bommer Canyon keeps Irvine's ranch edge close
Bommer Canyon Preserve links Irvine open space with old Irvine Ranch Cattle Camp, daily trails, guided-access areas, and wildlife habitat.
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