|

Alliance /
Marin
2144 Fourth St.
San Rafael, Calif. 94901
415 456 2121
415 456 4695 (Fax)
»
Meet our Agents
All About Marin
Although
Marin is usually thought of as a suburban residential and
recreational area, ranching and dairying are major features of
the rural areas of West Marin. Industry in the county includes
movie and video production, computer software, communications
equipment, printing, and the manufacture of plastic
products,ceramics, candles, and cheese.
One of
the nine Bay Area counties, Marin County is linked to San
Francisco by the Golden Gate Bridge and to the East Bay by the
Richmond-San Rafael Bridge. It is bordered on the north and
northeast by Sonoma County and on the west by the Pacific
Ocean.The 520 square miles of Marin offer a wide variety of
topography, climate, and vegetation, from the tidal flats of the
coastline to the slopes of Mt. Tamalpais rising 2,600 feet above
sea level; from the dense stands of redwood and pine to the
inland grasslands and exposed rocky areas, and the coastal fogs
that temper the warm inland temperatures in summer.
The
combination of mountains, sea, and climate in Marin County, with
141,400 acres (Marin County Assessor-Recorders Office, July
1996) of federal, state, and county parkland, county open
space, and two water districts' lands devoted to recreation, has
made the county a recreation spot for the entire Bay Area. Marin
County has many state, county and city operated parks and
recreational facilities including: China Camp State Park, Mt.
Tamalpais State Park, Point Reyes National Seashore, and the
Golden Gate National Recreation Area.
Marin
County children are educated in 19 school districts whose
enrollments range from 12 students to 7,000 students. Fifteen of
the school districts are elementary districts (K - 8); 2 are
unified districts (K - 12); and 2 are high school districts
(Grades 9 - 12). The Marin Community College has two campuses;
Kentfield and Novato. There are several private schools,
including Dominican University in San Rafael. |