CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

Railroad Square keeps Santa Rosa's depot-and-stonework story close

Santa Rosa's Railroad Square grew around rail work, Italian stonework, warehouses, agriculture, the 1906 earthquake, restoration, and today's SMART station.

Santa RosaRailroad SquareSonoma County

Santa Rosa’s Railroad Square feels different from a newer shopping area. The bones of the place still come from train work. Old warehouses, canneries, pasta shops, breweries, and rail buildings now hold shops, offices, restaurants, and places to gather.

The district also has a strong Italian layer. Many early Italian arrivals found work on the railroad and in farming. The area around the depot became known as Little Italy. Italian stoneworkers helped build some of the basalt buildings that still shape the district. Several key buildings went up between 1903 and 1907.

Railroad Square also shows how Santa Rosa came back after the 1906 earthquake. Only a few buildings in the district survived, including the 1903 train depot, the Western Hotel, and several brick warehouses. Rebuilding happened fast because the rail area still mattered. Farms, shipping, food packing, hotels, and local trade all depended on it.

Railroad Square tells a bigger Santa Rosa story than one block of old buildings. It points to trains, farming, new arrivals, earthquake recovery, careful reuse, and the return of passenger rail with SMART. The district joined the National Register of Historic Places in 1979, but you can feel its value just by walking the brick, stone, and depot streetscape.

Where to see it

Historic Railroad Square and the Santa Rosa downtown SMART station area.

Official sources

Official source trail

Reviewed July 7, 2026

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