BUILDING A BETTER BAY AREA: Fremont
Behind those solutions are the people of Fremont. They're the faces of a diverse and inclusive community.
[Ads /]
Fremont is a rapidly evolving city. And nothing quite captures that like talking to the families that live there -- new and old.
An Old Fremont Family
The largest piece of public art in Fremont harkens to a time long gone. It's based on a 1907 photo of the train that used to run through nearby Niles Canyon in a still-rustic time before the suburbs sprouted.
Some families here still have links to that era.
"Has Fremont changed?" we asked Cathy Mozzetti.
"Yeah. It really has. Too fast. Too busy."
"It takes you half an hour to get across town now," added her husband, Arnold. They're home-grown and married 69 years.
"They said we wouldn't last," said Cathy.
The Mozzettis still live in the house they built in 1958, with a mortgage of $65 a month, in a what once was a walnut grove on the formerly one-lane, dirt-covered Walnut Avenue.
How times have changed. "I think the best times was the 50's and 60's," said Arnold. That's when they raised their kids, Cyndie and Arnie.
[Ads /]
Now, those kids have taken over and continued the trucking company their family built from scratch with sweat and toil in 1946.
This generation has served as a new set of treads on experienced wheels. "When I die, I will still be working a half-day shift the day of my funeral," Cyndie likes to say.
"Does Fremont fit with San Francisco?" we asked Arnie. "No. San Francisco is too fast."
"My saying is that Fremont is big city but a small town."
And it's a changing town. Sample the local restaurants and your taste buds will tell you all about that.
"There are so many different kinds of foods here," said Amrina Rodino, an Indonesian. "You're not going to starve?" we kidded. "No."
A New Fremont Family
Fifty-seven percent of Fremont is Asian, which includes its large Afghani population.
People like Jamshid Ahmed, who owns Fremont Afghhan Kabob on Mowery Avenue. He has been here 14 years after moving from Kabul.
"In United States, I am happy for freedom. I have a good life."
[Ads /]
This is a man who fell in love, married, and immigrated. His wife, Tana, had been here much longer. "We're very fortunate to have a sense of security here. In Afghanistan, you don't have that," she told us.
Now they have 11-year-old Miriam, and 3-year-old Michelle. Two weeks ago, they added Ibraham and Ishmael.
Just like the people depicted in those statues, new arrivals keep coming to Fremont. The only constant? Change.
"Change is good," said 90-year-old Arnold. "Hard to get used to it, but it's better."
"Are you living the American dream?" we asked Tana.
"We are. Definitely."
And they're doing it in Fremont.
See more stories and videos about Building a Better Bay Area here.
RELATED STORIES & VIDEOS:
- Tesla worker injuries higher than traditional automakers
- Navigating through the politics of Fremont traffic
- Watch films from the golden age of cinema at this historic Fremont theater and museum
- Nonprofit develops low-income housing for homeless in Fremont
- Fremont community packs ABC7 News town hall, tackling issues within the city
- Fremont builds a downtown from the ground up
- From farms to Silicon Valley: Growing up during Fremont's population boom
- Kristi Yamaguchi talks growing up in Fremont, how the city is building a better Bay Area
- ABC7 Fremont Town Hall
- Hike to the top of the jewel of Fremont: Mission Peak
- 'Faces of Fremont': Bollywood dance studio
- Fun facts about Fremont
- Fremont's housing solutions
- Focus On Fremont