Woodbridge is bisected into two residential segments, called North Lake and South Lake, by the retail and business district. The street named Yale Loop encircles the entirety of Woodbridge. Each residential segment of Woodbridge has a lake at its center. The lakes are between three and six feet deep and each is crossed by a large wooden footbridge, owing the village its name. The village is walled off from the rest of Irvine by a row of pine trees and a continuous, -high
Privet hedge. Woodbridge, for the most part, is uniformly designed in a
New England Cape Cod style. In
Great Streets by Allan B. Jacobs, Pinewood (on the Northern edge of the village off the Yale Loop) is cited as one of the great "new urban" streets. Though the suburban style of place makes it difficult to take the "urban" designation seriously, Mr. Jacobs remarks on its gentle curvilinear aspect; there is no other street in Woodbridge that has the same characteristics. The tract in which Pinewood is the only circular street, it is also noted for its relatively profuse vegetation, particularly rich use of pepper trees, and the natural shake roofs which, in other tracts, have been replaced by steel or cement imitating other materials. ==Woodbridge Village Association==