The Oakland Public Conservatory of Music (OPC), a music education nonprofit specializing in African American musical traditions, is collaborating with Crave BBQ on concert and educational programming at the new space. OPC's founding director Angela Wellman says that while The New Zanzibar will honor the hotel's legacy of jazz, blues, funk, soul and Latin music, it will also cater to young people.

"It's going to be music that's grounded in the African American experience," she says. "But we have to try to stay relevant. We can't reinvent a museum type of situation—that's what it would be, like a living museum. That will be part of what we're doing, but we also have to be relevant and make sure we showcase exactly what's happening right now and how the music is continuing to evolve."

Amid Oakland's rising real estate prices, EBALDC's below–market-rate commercial rents are a big reason African-American small businesses and nonprofits have been able to anchor themselves in the neighborhood. OPC moved into the California Hotel's downstairs commercial space a year ago after being displaced from its previous location in 2014. And Blackball Universe, Grammy-winning Oakland musician Fantastic Negrito's record label, found a home in another EBALDC property down the block—a former liquor store—after losing its previous Jack London Square location.

Cultural preservation is front-of-mind for the new EBALDC tenants as Oakland's black population continues to decline amid ongoing gentrification. (African Americans made up 47 percent of Oakland's population in 1980, compared to 24.7 percent according to the latest census estimate.) "The way to sustain our culture is to make sure young people are acquiring skills to sustain it," says Wellman, adding that she and Rashad Armstead, the owner of Crave BBQ, will offer workshops and activities for young people interested in the music and restaurant businesses.

When the California hotel opened in 1929, West Oakland was a thriving African-American and Latino neighborhood with an active cultural scene. That changed in the 1950s, '60s and '70s, when infrastructure projects like the interstate highway system, BART and the U.S. Postal Service building on 7th Street displaced many of West Oakland's cultural institutions and longtime residents. In the '70s and '80s, the crack epidemic and mass incarceration further ravaged the community. And in recent years, West Oakland became the front line of a culture war as wealthier, whiter residents move in and upscale coffee shops and luxury apartment buildings spring up near homeless encampments and under-resourced schools.

"We have a lot of deep connections to West Oakland. My great-grandmother opened her first restaurant in the '60s, back when 7th Street was all black businesses," says Armstead. He plans to run a black food collective out of his new space, with food trucks, guest chefs, consumer products and and live cooking demos from black-owned businesses. The goal is to share resources with other black restaurateurs getting their projects off the ground.

"That is our way of combating gentrification," says Armstead. "Almost like setting the culture for businesses coming in here, letting them know we're not going anywhere."

Local residents seem to resonate with this mission. Annette Miller, who was handing out handmade gift baskets to kids at the Harvest Festival's pumpkin patch when I visited, is a lifelong West Oaklander who went through an arduous fight to save her grandmother's home from foreclosure. Not long after winning her house back, Miller's 19-year-old son was shot and killed. Those experiences motivated her to pour herself into community organizing; she's the chair of a neighborhood advocacy group called the Hoover/Foster Resident Action Council, which supports EBALDC's efforts to revitalize San Pablo Avenue.

"My thing is, even though I lost my loss, I feel that I still need to stay connected to the community to let folks know, there's actually different ways to heal, like meetings, being around kids, support organizations," she tells me while helping a little girl with glitter on her cheeks select a pumpkin. "As long as I mix myself with other organizations like SPARC, I believe we can make a difference."

During my visit, I check out another party in the California Hotel's downstairs rec room, where residents of all ages serve themselves from a soul food steam table as one neighbor regales them with his conga playing. "[The residents] hold a lot of history, they have a lot of opinions on how things should play out," says Monique Kennedy, EBALDC's West Oakland resident services manager. Her job is to help the residents of the hotel and neighboring EBALDC properties coordinate events and advocate for their interests.

"We wanted to come here because we wanted to be part of a solution to rebuild our neighborhoods," says Field, the manager of Blackball Universe, which released Fantastic Negrito's 2016 album titled The Last Days of Oakland.