Lodinews.com Logo

Discover. . .

Stories

Lodi: It’s a stylish blend of old and new full story...

Lodi’s mayor offers the city’s welcome full story...

Planning ahead gets the most out of a trip full story...

Hill House tops Lodi’s list of historical places full story...

Lodi continues to become the place to be full story...

Great wines take lots of patience, passion full story...

Everything you wanted to know about wine full story...

Lodi’s Wine Trail gives tasters a real treat full story...

Zinfandel: The grape that made Lodi great full story...

Reading a wine label full story...

Lodi: Perfect base for adventurous day trips full story...

Stadium 12: A great place to catch a film full story...

Lodi Lake: A place to get away from it all full story...

Looking for history? Lodi is your destination full story...

Touring is fun, but we’ve all got to eat full story...

Where you can find a meal that will satisfy full story...

Taverns, pubs, wine, suds: Find it in Lodi full story...

Art form: Pairing the right wine and food full story...

Want to shop until you drop? Then try Lodi full story...

Where to find that special item full story...

Sweet? Salty? Quenching? Just take a tour full story...

For a gift that says ‘Lodi’ full story...

Lodi: The place to discover yesteryear’s treasures today full story...

Antiques? Lodi has something for everyone full story...

You’ve eaten, you’ve toured — now sleep! full story...

Mother Lode: The hills are alive with history full story...

Many species of birds call Lodi home full story...

Residents are proud to be ‘Stuck in Lodi’ full story...

Mokelumne: A river full of fun, adventure full story...

For outdoor enthusiasts, Lodi is the place full story...

Outdoor activities abound in Lodi full story...

In the Lodi area, there’s lots to see and do full story...

From jumping frogs to street fairs, it’s here full story...

Performing arts venues await you full story...

There’s a golf course to satisfy every player full story...

Challenge: The best 18 golf holes around full story...

Lodi: It’s a stylish blend of old and new

By News-Sentinel Staff

Lodi is an engaging blend of the old and new.

It is a contemporary community with a glitzy downtown cinema, a stylishly renovated performing arts center and upper-scale restaurants.

Lodi Arch
The historic mission-style Lodi Arch greets visitors as they enter the heart of the city’s downtown area.

But Lodi, unlike many communities favored by tourists, also remains an authentic Valley town.

Its roots still run deep in the sandy clay loam, with a large and productive cannery, thousands of acres of working vineyards and a giant General Mills plant that produces Cheerios and many other food products.

It is a town that has updated its style without losing its sense of history.

With a population of 60,000, Lodi is large enough to offer variety and interest, small enough to retain a sense of charm.

In recent years, it is wine that has propelled the local economy, and wine that has attracted visitors by the legion.

Lodi has a temperate climate, with moist winters and sunny summers tempered by breezes rising from the Delta.

It’s an ideal place to grow wine grapes, which have been cultivated in the area since the 1850s.

Once a producer of ho-hum jug wines, the Lodi area now produces outstanding varietals that consistently bring home the gold and silver at national and even international competitions.

Today Lodi leads all California wine districts in the production of the top five premium varieties: Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Zinfandel. (Locals are especially proud of the old vine Zinfandels.)

Visitors will find plenty of wine tasting opportunities in settings that are pleasant and personal. That fellow pouring you a generous taste of Merlot may just be the vintner who lovingly produced it.

The area’s wine industry has a reputation for quality — and for embracing progressive growing practices that minimize the use of pesticides and other chemicals.

Embroidered by vineyards and wineries, Lodi’s center is still its downtown. The central district was renovated through an innovative public-private partnership that invested in new streets, sidewalks, planters and street lights.

The crowning touch was a new arch on School Street at Lodi Avenue that artfully incorporates touches of colored tile and twinings of grapevines. It extends the theme of Lodi as a city of arches; the town’s original arch gracefully rises over Pine Street downtown and remains the community’s iconic image.

Cranes
Rowland Cheney’s sculpture paying homage to Sandhill cranes dominates the plaza near Lodi’s Norman Rockwell-style train station. (Jennifer M. Howell/News-Sentinel)

Downtown’s rebirth was nurtured by the creation of a 12-screen, all-the-frills cinema. Since it opened, new cafes and shops have clustered, as hoped, around the sprawling movie house, adding variety and vitality to downtown’s shopping, dining and cultural scene.

A new edifice downtown, opened in late 2003, is the public safety building. Part of the city’s downtown campus that includes City Hall and the Carnegie Forum, the public safety center is a state-of-the-art operation that includes a jail, dispatch center, and work-out room for police employees.

Visitors will find Lodi’s downtown residential neighborhoods reminiscent of an earlier time, when homes were individually designed and crafted, when hardwood floors were the norm, broad front porches were mandatory and the backyards were big enough to cultivate copious amounts of tomatoes and daffodils.

Lodi is well-known for its varied and beautifully maintained stock of bungalows and residents have staged several events celebrating these stylish and functional structures.

At the edge of downtown is Hutchins Street Square. A former high school, the center was renovated (again through a public-private partnership) and now includes a majestic theater, meeting and convention quarters, a swimming pool, and a senior day care operation.

On the Mokelumne River, a new dam is rising to help flood control, enhance the local fishery and allow Lodi Lake to remain full year-round (It is now drained during the rainy season.)

Exploring Lodi, visitors will find repeated examples of things old and things reborn.

It’s part of the town’s charm — and it’s character.

©2004 Lodi News-Sentinel