Where children once gathered after school, families met for classes and events, and neighbors built community across generations, there was only space. It was a reminder of what had been lost when the Mosswood Community Recreation Center burned down in 2016.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Building used as Oakland school sustains significant fire damage
This week, that absence ended.
With a ribbon cutting, applause and wide-eyed tours from longtime residents, Oakland officially reopened the Mosswood Community Recreation Center: a new, state-of-the-art facility in the same park where the original building once stood. For the surrounding neighborhoods, the moment was less about a new structure and more about closure, renewal, and the promise of what comes next.
"Congratulations, Mosswood," rang out during the ceremony, marking a long-awaited homecoming for a community asset many feared might never return.
A Space Reimagined
Stepping inside the new Mosswood Recreation Center, the first thing visitors notice is light. Floor-to-ceiling windows pour daylight into the two-story building, illuminating natural materials, open hallways, and modern gathering spaces designed to welcome people in rather than close them off. Classrooms flank common areas. A computer lab hums with possibility. Program rooms are built, not just for recreation, but for learning -- from traditional crafts to emerging technology.
"It's so beautiful," said Oakland resident Thu Ban Perry, who brought her son to explore the space on opening day. "It's so eyecatching -- so much light, natural elements. It's really beautiful. I think people will love coming into this space."
For Perry, the visit was personal. She grew up coming to the original Mosswood Rec Center. It was a place filled with memories but unmistakably showing its age even before the fire.
"It was old. It was dated. It was drab," she said simply.
The contrast between then and now is stark and intentional. City leaders say the new Mosswood Center was designed not just to replace what was lost but to meet the needs of a changing Oakland. The building includes spaces for woodshop and metalwork, alongside classrooms where youth will learn coding and artificial intelligence. It will be a blend of practical skills and future-focused education rarely housed under one roof in a neighborhood recreation center.
During a tour, a guide pointed out rooms buzzing with potential.
"Woodshop and metal," they said, "and lots of different programs. AI -- artificial intelligence -- they'll be learning in this room."
10 Years in the Making
The original Mosswood Recreation Center was destroyed by fire in 2016. The cause was never determined, but the loss was immediate and deeply felt, especially in a neighborhood where public space is critical. At the time, community leaders promised to rebuild. But as years passed, many residents wondered if those promises would survive the realities of budget constraints, competing priorities and citywide challenges.
For Oakland City Councilmember Carroll Fife, the reopening represents more than a delayed construction project finally completed.
"It was devastating when we lost it to a fire," Fife said. "But I consider this the phoenix rising from the ashes."
The metaphor came up repeatedly during the celebration: a symbol of resilience not just for a building, but for a community that waited, organized, and refused to let Mosswood fade into memory.
Funding for the $20 million project came through an infrastructure bond measure, meaning Oakland voters themselves played a role in making the rebuild possible. Supporters argue the investment goes beyond bricks and mortar.
Investing in the Future
Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee toured the facility alongside residents, educators and city officials, pausing in classrooms and peering into program spaces designed for hands-on learning. She called the center an investment, not just in infrastructure, but in people.
"Just look," Lee said. "This is about families and children, but it's also about the future. It's about giving our young people what they need to move forward."
That sentiment resonated with parents like Deedra Isles, who plans to bring her daughters to Mosswood regularly.
"It's nice for Oakland to have a building like this," Isles said, watching her children explore the space.
Outside, the amenities extend beyond the building. New pickleball courts sit nearby, signaling an effort to make Mosswood Park a destination for all ages, from toddlers attending their first class to seniors looking for recreation and connection.
Honoring the Past While Building Ahead
Just yards from the gleaming new recreation center stands another Mosswood landmark -- one that tells a very different story.
The Moss House, a Gothic Victorian home nestled within the park, has sat vacant for years. Despite its historic beauty, it had remained largely untouched as the new center took shape. Now, city leaders say attention is turning there next.
"I was asked to get it on the landmarks register, so it's considered a historic landmark," Fife said. "I'm looking into that."
The juxtaposition of the brand new recreation center and the aging Moss House highlights a broader theme in Oakland: how to move forward without losing sight of what came before.
A Place to Belong Again
As opening-day crowds filtered through Mosswood Park, the mood was unmistakably celebratory, but also reflective.
For nearly 10 years, a central gathering place was missing. Its return restores more than square footage. It restores routines, relationships and a sense of belonging that can't easily be replaced.
For children who are too young to remember the fire, Mosswood Recreation Center will simply be where they learn, play and grow. For adults who waited years to see the doors reopen, it stands as proof that persistence matters.
For now, the focus is on celebration and on filling the building with life.
At Mosswood, the lights are back on, the doors are open and a new generation of Oaklanders finally has a space to call their own.