Business View Civil and Municipal | Volume 2, Issue 12

84 CIVIL AND MUNICIPAL VOLUME 2, ISSUE 11 , California T he indigenous Ohlone people were the first to steward and walk the coastal hills and scrubland of the parcel of Earth now known as Millbrae, California. A peace-loving tribe, they mostly subsisted on the shellfish they harvested from the San Francisco Bay. Today, Millbrae enjoys the same sun-warmed landscape and is still just as bountiful a provider, albeit in different ways. Located at what is now the heart of one of the most dynamic economic regions in the country, it’s become a residential enclave simmering with entrepreneurial talent, opportunity, and all the contrivances to support suburban-to- urban development. The basics for which Millbrae is known – hills, houses, and sunshine – are just the foundation for the real meat of the meal involving the city’s mobility ecosystem. The nerve centre of the Peninsula’s public The gem of the Peninsula

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