Marin Independent Journal

Rambling through Concord’s vibrant Todos Santos Plaza

From the spring beer festival to great food and history tours, the city's main square has plenty to offer in 2023

- By John Metcalfe

We’re in a bedroom of the Galindo Home and Gardens, an 1850s ranch house in Concord, standing before what to all extents looks like a jar of hair.

“This is a ‘hair keeper,'” explains our tour guide, a member of the Concord Historical Society. “Back in Victorian times, you’d save hair and stitch it into memorial artwork of a heart or maybe into a broach. Some people would even use it to poof up their own hair.”

Students from UC Davis once came here and observed the hair, the guide continues, “They said, ‘Wouldn’t it be neat to do a DNA analysis? It could be dog hair.’ But the jar’s full, whatever it is.”

We are admiring this mysterious hair — and more to the point, the Galindo home — on a recent ramble through the Bay Area’s 10th largest city. What is there to say about Concord, in general? Well, in 2022 it was ranked the happiest city in America, according to Instagrams­elfie smiles. It’s the birthplace of Tom Hanks and childhood home of Carlos Alazraqui, voice of the Taco Bell chihuahua.

Concord is also the home of Todos Santos Plaza, a bustling downtown square and destinatio­n spot for locals and out-of-townvisito­rs alike. The American Planning Associatio­n has dubbed the plaza a “Great Place in California” for its urban design, vibrant retail scene and community events including farmers markets, summer concerts and a popular Spring Brews Festival, which falls on March 25 this year. That specifical­ly is what we’re investigat­ing here in Tom Hanks territory — the depths of culture, cuisine and history around Todos Santos Plaza.

“I like the headboard,” says a man on our historic home tour, pointing to a massive wooden edifice overshadow­ing the bed. “That got loose in an earthquake? It’d be the end of you.”

The Galindo manor is a fine way to start a day trip. It was built in 1856 by Francisco Galindo, a Spanish-American capitalist and son-in-law of Salvio Pacheco, founder of early Concord. The house is full of lovely Eastlake furniture, like Victorian but not as fussy. There’s a naturalist­ic painting made with dried moss and ferns and marble fireplaces that burned coal, because there weren’t a lot of big trees around to chop.

“The kitchen was initially out in the yard,” notes our guide. “Back then, if your kitchen caught fire and burned down, there goes your house.”

The Concord Historical Society played a major hand in renovating the house to its current beautiful state. Wallpaper was reconstruc­ted from a miniscule patch hidden near a light fixture, and there was a matter of removing bees. The society also is behind the next-door Concord Museum, which is celebratin­g its grand opening with a historical exhibit and sprawling model railroad.

“Hello! You like trains?” a man asks a visitor, staring intently. “Yes. I love trains,” the visitor replies, locking eyes with equal intensity.

The track traces the route of the old San Ramon Valley Branch Line of the Southern Pacific Railroad, nowadays part of the Iron Horse Regional Trail. Early 1900s buildings and cattle farms are recreated in surgical “N scale” precision. The train even chugs across an iron bridge and creek with ant-sized swimmers in the water, though at this size, it’s hard to tell if there’s any skinny-dipping going on.

One floor below is the historical society’s new events center with a stage named in honor of Dave Brubeck. The famous jazz musician was born in Concord and studied veterinary science at college in Stockton with the intent of becoming a rancher. It was there a professor told him: “Brubeck, your mind’s not here. It’s across the lawn in the conservato­ry. Please go there. Stop wasting my time and yours.” You can see Brubeck’s former home a few blocks away, though it’s now offices for a surgery group.

Downtown’s looking even more colorful these days, thanks to nine murals from California artists that went up last summer, the first mass display of public art in the city — controvers­ial Spirit Poles notwithsta­nding. You’ll find most of them clustered around Todos Santos Plaza: an intricate painting of Egyptian lore, a tribute to the flora and fauna of Mount Diablo and fierce Aztec creatures from Jesse Hernandez, whose work has been featured by Marvel and PlayStatio­n.

On a smaller scale is the gallery in the loft of Side Gate Brewery and Beer Garden. Right now, there’s a charming exhibit of classic-car artworks mounted on wooden beer barrels. You can enrich your mind with culture, then relax it with a Gates of Wrath double IPA or Suburban Forager, a saison made with locally gathered herbs.

Up the road is the Hop Grenade taproom and bottle shop, pouring suds from NorCal greats like Ghost Town and Russian River. The taproom happens to be the world headquarte­rs of the Brewing Network, a podcasting and webcast leviathan devoted to profession­al and homebrewin­g shows. The network has featured celebs from Zane Lamprey and Adam Carolla to the guys from Mystery Science Theater 3000 — you can grab a pint and watch the magic happen in a glass-fronted recording studio.

Concord has a sizable Asian population, and it’s

 ?? PHOTOS BY DAI SUGANO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? People visit a restaurant strip in downtown Concord.
PHOTOS BY DAI SUGANO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP People visit a restaurant strip in downtown Concord.
 ?? ?? The “Lima Piqueo” sampler at Concord’s Lima, a restaurant featuring ceviches, grilled beef heart, Pisco sours and other Peruvian cuisine.
The “Lima Piqueo” sampler at Concord’s Lima, a restaurant featuring ceviches, grilled beef heart, Pisco sours and other Peruvian cuisine.
 ?? ?? The “Pink Bedroom” inside the historic Galindo Home in Concord.
The “Pink Bedroom” inside the historic Galindo Home in Concord.
 ?? ?? Todos Santos Plaza in downtown Concord.
Todos Santos Plaza in downtown Concord.

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