List of neighborhoods in San Francisco
San Francisco, in the US state of California, has both major, well-known neighborhoods and districts as well as smaller, specific subsections and developments. While there is considerable fluidity among the sources, one guidebook identifies five major districts, corresponding to the four quadrants plus a south central district.[1] These five broad districts, counterclockwise are: Central/downtown, Richmond, Sunset, Upper Market and beyond (south central) and Bernal Heights/Bayview and beyond (southeast). Within each of these five districts are located major neighborhoods, and again there is considerable fluidity seen in the sources. The San Francisco Planning Department officially identifies 36 neighborhoods. Within these 36 official neighborhoods are a large number of minor districts, some of which are historical, and some of which are overlapping.
Some of San Francisco's neighborhoods are also officially designated as "cultural districts".
Alamo Square
Alamo Square is a subset of the Western Addition neighborhood. Its boundaries are not well-defined, but are generally considered to be Webster Street on the east, Golden Gate Avenue on the north, Divisadero Street on the west, and Oak Street on the south. It is characterized by Victorian architecture that was left largely untouched by the urban renewal projects in other parts of the Western Addition. On a clear day, the Transamerica Pyramid building and the tops of the Golden Gate Bridge and Bay Bridge can be seen from the park's center. San Francisco's City Hall can be seen directly down Fulton Street. A row of Victorian houses facing the park on Steiner Street, known as the painted ladies, are often shown in the foreground of panoramic pictures of the city's downtown area.
Anza Vista
Ashbury Heights
Ashbury Heights is a neighborhood on the hill to the south of the
Balboa Hollow
Balboa Hollow is a neighborhood within the
Balboa Terrace
Balboa Terrace is a small residential neighborhood in southwestern San Francisco bounded by Junipero Serra Boulevard, Monterey Boulevard, Aptos Avenue and Ocean Avenue along the southern edge of the exclusive St. Francis Wood development.
The Bayview
The Bayview stretches along
Belden Place
A small neighborhood near the Financial District, being the historical location of the French Quarter in San Francisco.
Bernal Heights
Bernal Heights is a neighborhood perched on a hill in between the Mission district, Bayview, and the Portola district. The neighborhood is known for its community feeling and progressive vibe. The majority of the neighborhood is white, but there are significant Southern Italian, Latino and African American populations in the area as well. The main shopping area in Bernal Heights is Cortland Avenue, with a variety of storefronts that include a health food store, a community center, a yoga studio, bars, bakeries, and restaurants. Many of the quaint, hilly streets in the neighborhood are so narrow that two cars cannot pass in opposite directions without one car pulling over to the side of the road.
Buena Vista
The Buena Vista neighborhood surrounds
Butchertown (old and new)
Butchertown (new)[3] (see Islais Creek) is an industrial neighborhood in San Francisco that historically housed the city's slaughterhouses. It is one of the few remaining industrial sectors of San Francisco.
Originally, Butchertown[4] extended into the neighborhood now known as Dogpatch. Today's street borders are Cesar Chavez to the north, Interstate 280 to the west, Industrial Street and Oakdale Avenue to the south, and 3rd Street to the east. There are still two meat rendering plants in the neighborhood, and until pollution control measures were taken in 1995 the stench was still quite apparent. Butchertown is also headquarters to San Francisco's only active freight railroad, the San Francisco Bay Railroad,[5] a Class 3 short-line carrier.
Old Butchertown[6] was along the shores of Mission Creek on Mission Bay. Mission Bay, was subsequently to become the land-filled Mission Bay neighborhood.
The Castro
Cathedral Hill
Cathedral Hill is a small area in the
The Cathedral Hill Hotel, a historic building previously named the
China Basin
China Basin is a neighborhood built on
Chinatown
Civic Center
Clarendon Heights
The Clarendon Heights neighborhood is in the central part of San Francisco, to the north of
Cole Valley
Cole Valley is a small neighborhood tucked into a u-shaped valley. Frederick Street is the northern boundary, Stanyan Street on the west, Clayton Street on the east, and the foothill (Belgrave Street) of Twin Peaks on the south.
Sometimes referred to as a subsection of the Haight district, Cole Valley's main street is at Cole and Carl streets, where Cole Hardware, Luke's Local and La Boulangerie cafe anchor the neighborhood, with Tank Hill in the southeast corner with views toward the ocean, Marin and the eastern half of the city.[citation needed]
Corona Heights
The Corona Heights neighborhood is a small affluent district in San Francisco that surrounds the
Cow Hollow
Cow Hollow is a generally affluent neighborhood located between Russian Hill and the Presidio and bordering the Marina District on one side and Pacific Heights on the other. The land was used for cow grazing (as its name would imply) and a settlement for fishermen (the coastline was much closer to this area than it is now). The main shopping thoroughfare is Union Street, known for its restaurants, boutique shopping, health spas, and wellness centers.
Crocker-Amazon
Design District
The Design District is located in the low-lying area between Townsend Street and 16th Street, west of Mission Bay. It is a mixed industrial-office-retail area, with a concentration of showrooms and upscale shops, as well as the San Francisco campus of the California College of the Arts.
Diamond Heights
Dogpatch
The "Dogpatch" is a neighborhood in
Dogpatch was originally part of Potrero Nuevo and its history is closely tied to Potrero Hill. Dogpatch has its own neighborhood association but shares a merchant association, Democratic caucuses, and general neighborhood matters with Potrero Hill.
Dolores Heights
Dolores Heights is a hilly neighborhood named after the eponymous hill within the neighborhood. It borders the
Many streets within Dolores Heights are dead-end
Duboce Triangle
The Embarcadero
Eureka Valley
The neighborhood known as "Eureka Heights" refers to the hill streets above Eureka Valley to the west, bounded by Market Street to the north and west, Douglas Street to the east, and 22nd Street to the south. Kite Hill park falls within the boundary of the Eureka Heights neighborhood and has beautiful views of San Francisco. It's also the geographic "center" of the city.
The Excelsior
The Fillmore
The Financial District
The Financial District South
This new neighborhood stretches from Market to Brannan and Main to 3rd Streets,[11] and will be anchored by the new Transbay Transit Center.[12] This neighborhood is adjacent to Yerba Buena.
Fisherman's Wharf
Forest Hill
Forest Knolls
Forest Knolls is a neighborhood within the Inner Sunset built on the southwestern side of Mount Sutro, near the main UCSF campus. Warren Drive is the southern and western border, Mount Sutro is the northern border and the Midtown Terrace neighborhood is to the east. Homes are mostly fully detached and many have views of the San Francisco Bay or Pacific Ocean.
Glen Park
Golden Gate Heights
Golden Gate Heights is a hilly neighborhood south of the Inner Sunset and northwest of
The Haight
Hayes Valley
Hunters Point
India Basin
Ingleside
The Ingleside neighborhood is located in the southwestern part of San Francisco, near
Ingleside Terraces
Ingleside Terraces[14] is an affluent neighborhood of approximately 750 homes[15] built at the former location of the Ingleside Racetrack[16] in the southwestern part of San Francisco.[17] It is adjacent to the Ingleside neighborhood, and is bordered by Ocean Avenue to the north, Ashton Avenue to the east, Holloway Avenue to the south and Junipero Serra Boulevard to the west. The main local event that occurs is the Annual Sundial Park Picnic, in which the local residents host bicycle, chariot, and wagon racing.[18] There is a large sundial[19] located on Entrada Court, surrounded by oval-shaped Urbano Drive, which was once a horse race track.
The Inner Sunset
The Inner Sunset is the northeasternmost corner of the Sunset District. The commercial district around 9th Avenue and Irving Street is its general center. The neighborhood features the historic Catholic church, St. Anne of the Sunset, which was the original Catholic parish for the Sunset District and has stood at 14th and Judah for more than 100 years. The Inner Sunset is west of Stanyan Street, south of Golden Gate Park, and north of Kirkham Street (the northern border for Golden Gate Heights) but may encompass some parts south all the way to Ortega (at 8th and 9th Avenues). Today, most would place the Inner Sunset's western border at 19th Avenue. However, historically, the Inner Sunset's borders extend out to 20th Avenue where the former Market Street Railway Company's #17 line used to run.[20]
Irish Hill
Islais Creek
Also called Islais Landing, see Butchertown (Old and New))
Jackson Square
A six-block neighborhood, adjacent to the North Beach and Chinatown located immediately north of the Transamerica Pyramid.[21]
Japantown
Jordan Park
Jordan Park is a small neighborhood in the northern portion of San Francisco as part of the Western Addition of the city, bordered by Arguello Boulevard to the west, Geary Boulevard to the south, California Street to the north and Parker Avenue to the east. It is oftentimes mistaken as being part of the Laurel Heights or Richmond District neighborhoods.
Laguna Honda
Laguna Honda (or Forest Hill Extension) is a small neighborhood between
Lake Street
The Lake Street neighborhood is bounded by the Presidio of San Francisco to the north (including Mountain Lake Park and the Presidio Golf Course), Presidio Heights to the east (Arguello Boulevard), the Inner Richmond to the south (California Street), and Sea Cliff to the west (27th Avenue). It offers large and traditional San Franciscan homes including many grand Edwardians, Victorians, and Queen Annes. The Lake Street neighborhood provides ease of access to commercial strips on Geary, Clement and California streets in the Richmond, points north and south via Route 1, the Golden Gate Bridge, biking and hiking trails in the Presidio and Lincoln Park, and the Legion of Honor Museum.
Its name is derived from its proximity to Mountain Lake, one of the few remaining natural lakes in San Francisco, and Lake Street, the neighborhood's northernmost east–west artery. Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza ended his second northward expedition at the lake, stopping for two days in 1776. While here he located a site for the Spanish presidio that was later built. A plaque was placed in September 1957 near the point where he stayed.
Lakeside
Lakeside is a long, narrow neighborhood between 19th Avenue (
Lakeshore
The Lakeshore district is bounded by Sloat Blvd, 26th Avenue, Gellert Drive and Lake Merced. Lakeshore is west of Stonestown, south of Parkside, west of Lakeside, and east of the Zoo. Lowell High School and Lakeshore Elementary are located in Lakeshore. Lakeshore Plaza is also located here.
Laurel Heights
Laurel Heights is a neighborhood to the south of the Presidio and the Presidio Heights neighborhood, the east of the Richmond District, and the west of the Lower Pacific Heights neighborhood. It is bordered by Geary Boulevard or the University of San Francisco campus to the south, Arguello Boulevard to the west, California Street to the north and Presidio Avenue to the east. The Laurel Village shopping center is located on California between Laurel and Spruce, the California Pacific Medical Center is on California between Arguello and Maple, and a UCSF campus is located in the northeastern corner of the neighborhood.
Lincoln Manor
Little Hollywood
Little Hollywood is a small neighborhood in the southeastern edge of San Francisco. It is centered around Blanken Avenue between Bayshore Boulevard and
Little Russia
Little Russia is a concentration of Russian-speaking immigrants along Geary Boulevard between the Russian Cathedral of the Holy Virgin at 27th Avenue and the Russian Renaissance restaurant at 17th Avenue, in the Richmond District, both established in the 1920s. The term is in local unofficial use.[23] It is the heart of San Francisco's 80,000 Russian-Americans. The neighborhood was established in the 1920s, with subsequent arrivals in the 1940s, 1950s (from China and the Philippines) and the "Third Wave" in the 1970s and 1980s. Additional limited immigration took place after the breakup of the Soviet Union in the 1990s and 2000s.[citation needed]
Little Saigon
Lone Mountain
The Lower Haight
Lower Pacific Heights
Lower Pacific Heights is located between Pine Street on the north and Geary Boulevard on the south. The area borders Japantown to the east, the Western Addition to the south, Pacific Heights to the north and Laurel Heights to the west.
Lower Nob Hill
Lower Nob Hill is the southern side of
The Marina
Merced Heights
Merced Heights, also known as Lakeview, is a neighborhood in the southwestern part of the city, west of the Ingleside and Oceanview neighborhoods. It is bordered to the south by Brotherhood Way, to the west by Junipero Serra Boulevard, to the north by Holloway Avenue, and to the east by Orizaba Avenue. The Oceanview Library is located on Randolph Street at Ramsell Street, and there are two public parks on Shields Street. Brooks Park is at Arch Street, and Merced Heights Playground is at Byxbee Street. There is also a "mini-park" at Randolph and Bright. At an elevation of 500 feet (150 m), the Shields Orizaba Rocky Outcrop is the highest point in Merced Heights.
Merced Manor
Merced Manor is a neighborhood in southwestern San Francisco, between
Midtown Terrace
Midtown Terrace is a neighborhood in central San Francisco, on the western slope of
Mid-Market
Miraloma Park
The Miraloma Park neighborhood is in the central part of San Francisco, between Glen Canyon Park and Mount Davidson. Portola Drive borders Miraloma Park to the north, and the neighborhood of Sunnyside is to the south. Miraloma Playground is located on Omar Way at Rockdale, and Sunnyside Playground is south of Teresita Boulevard near Foerster Street.
Mission Bay
The Mission Bay neighborhood is built on
The Mission
Mission Dolores
Mission Dolores, bounded by Market Street, the
Mission Terrace
Mission Terrace is a neighborhood in the south-central part of San Francisco. It is bounded on the north and west by
Monterey Heights
Monterey Heights is a small neighborhood on the western slope of Mount Davidson. It is bounded on the south by Monterey Boulevard and to the east by Yerba Buena Avenue.
Mount Davidson
Mount Davidson is not a neighborhood per se, but rather is encircled by the Miraloma Park neighborhood. Other nearby neighborhoods often associated with Mount Davidson include Monterey Heights, Sherwood Forest, and Westwood Highlands.
Nob Hill
Noe Valley
North Beach
Oceanview
The Oceanview neighborhood is located in southern San Francisco, south of the Ingleside neighborhood and the Ocean Avenue campus of City College. It is bordered by Interstate 280 to the south and east, Lakeview Avenue to the north and Orizaba Avenue to the west. Oceanview Playground and Minnie and Lovie Ward Recreation Center is located in the middle of the neighborhood, between Plymouth, Capitol, Lobos and Montana. Ocean View Branch Library is located at 345 Randolph St. Oceanview is served by MUNI Routes M and 54. Oceanview, also referred to as Lakeview by the natives of the community, has a rich history.[29]
Particularly noteworthy is its African American community, who migrated there in the 1960s from the
The demographic character of the OMI neighborhoods began to change after World War II. Many African-Americans, who had migrated to the Bay Area for work during the war, secured good-paying jobs and settled permanently in new homes in Ingleside, Merced Heights and Oceanview when the war ended. In 1950, African-Americans made up 5% of the population in the Ingleside, Merced Heights and Oceanview census tracts, and by 1970 the percentage had increased to 62%.
Fueled by vacant land in Merced Heights and Oceanview, the post-war housing boom, the desire to own their own homes, and the already significant presence of African-Americans in the neighborhoods, the black population exploded from 1950 to 1960. By 1960, African-Americans made up 40% of Merced Heights, 32% of Ingleside and 59% of Oceanview. While some whites moved out, generally to suburban tracts heavily marketed to them, the number of blacks living in OMI increased twelvefold (from 602 in 1950 to 7,273 in 1960), while the citywide black population less than doubled (43,000 in 1950 to 74,000 in 1960).
There is anecdotal evidence that African-Americans moved to the OMI after being displaced by the first phase of urban renewal in the Western Addition (the A-1 Project) in the late 1950s. Relocation records, while incomplete, show that the vast majority of displaced residents of the Western Addition found nearby accommodations. Of the 3,700 households of all races (family and single households) living in the project area in 1957, about 2,010 moved without relocation assistance and to unknown whereabouts. Of the remaining 1,602, 67% moved to other parts of the Western Addition and only 2.6%, or 34 households, moved to the West of Twin Peaks area.
By 1970, the OMI had matured into a middle-class district of single-family, owner-occupied homes. Seventy-six percent of the land area in the Ingleside, Oceanview, and Merced Heights neighborhoods was residential (100% was residential in Ingleside Terraces), compared with 39% citywide. The housing stock was overwhelming single family (95% vs. 68% citywide) and owner- occupied (72% vs. 31% citywide), while the population was mostly African American (63% compared with 13% citywide). In recent years, the OMI has witnessed an influx of Asian-American and other ethnic groups, making it one of San Francisco's most diverse neighborhoods. The OMI is more Hispanic, Black, and Asian than San Francisco as a whole.
The Outer Mission
The Outer Mission neighborhood is bounded by Geneva Avenue, San Jose Avenue, and Mission Street.[31] It is bordered by the Excelsior, Outer Mission, and Ingleside. The Muni streetcar historic "car barn" is at one corner of this neighborhood. Cayuga Park is located in this neighborhood. The Cayuga Improvement Association (CIA) covers the area bounded by Interstate 280, Mission Street, Sickles and Onondaga. Some folks have attempted to define "Cayuga Terrace" as a subset neighborhood of the larger Mission Terrace neighborhood, but maps show Geneva Avenue as the cutoff.
The Outer Sunset
Pacific Heights
Parkmerced
The Parkside
Parkside is to the south of the
Parnassus
South of Cole Valley and Ashbury Heights; north of Claredon Heights and Forest Knolls; east of Inner Sunset; west of Corona Heights.
Polk Gulch
Polk Gulch, a section of Polk Street is sometimes defined as the commercial section of Polk Street, roughly between Eddy Street to the south and California Street to the north. The Polk Corridor Business Association has announced in June 2006 the local business owners intend to publicize the neighborhood as "Polk Village"[32][33][34][35][36]
Portola
Portola
Portola (pronounced PORE-toe-luh, by denizens) was named after the old Portola School, which in turn was named after the Spanish explorer
Portola Place
Portola Place is a new development located in the Bayview district, and used to be a brewery. Portola Place is bounded by Williams Avenue to the north, Egbert Avenue to the south, Kalmanovitz Street and the CalTrain railroad tracks to the east, and Newhall Street to the west.[41][42]
Potrero Hill
The Presidio
Presidio Heights
Presidio Heights is a small, affluent neighborhood located between the Presidio and the Laurel Heights neighborhood. It is bordered by Pacific Avenue and the Presidio parklands to the north, Arguello Boulevard and the Richmond District to the west, California Street (Laurel Village shopping center, previously the Laurel Hills Cemetery) and Laurel Heights to the south, and Presidio Avenue and Pacific Heights to the east.
The neighborhood's name predates the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. It is often listed together with Pacific Heights, its neighbor to the east, in real estate listings. The homes were mostly built in the early 1900s, many of which are of the Edwardian style.
There are shopping districts on Sacramento Street and on
The Jewish Community Center of San Francisco is on California Street at Presidio Avenue in Presidio Heights.
The neighborhood was the site of the murder of Paul Stine by the Zodiac Killer near the corner of Washington and Cherry.
The Richmond
Rincon Hill
Rincon Hill, one of the hills of San Francisco, was a former industrial, and now a developing highrise neighborhood located south of the Financial District, in the South of Market area, as it also serves as an anchor to the Bay Bridge. Due to its proximity to downtown, following the Gold Rush this was San Francisco's first affluent neighborhood, but later became mostly industrial. Most of the natural landscape was demolished in the 1930s to make way for the Bay Bridge. After several iterations of comprehensive planning, the hill is transitioning into a pedestrian oriented, high density, mixed use neighborhood. The neighborhood is again becoming one of the premier residential spots in San Francisco with the addition of many luxury buildings, the close proximity to the water, and the increase in green space and public parks.
A marketing effort, started in 2017, attempts to give Rincon Hill and parts of South Beach / SOMA a new neighborhood name: The East Cut.[46]
Russian Hill
Saint Francis Wood
Sea Cliff
Sherwood Forest
Sherwood Forest is a small neighborhood on the south western slope of Mount Davidson, with Dalewood Way to the north and east and Lansdale Avenue to the south and west.
Silver Terrace
Silver Terrace is a neighborhood in the south eastern corner of San Francisco, between the Bayview and Portola neighborhoods. It is roughly bordered by Third Street to the east, Palou Avenue and Silver Avenue to the north, Williams Avenue to the south and Bayshore Boulevard and
South Beach
The South Beach neighborhood encompasses the moderately affluent, medium-density mixed-use blocks which border
In addition, the main buildings for the local Academy of Art University are found in South Beach.[47]
South End
South End Historic District, San Francisco, California[48]
South of Market
South Park
Dating to 1852, South Park is a small neighborhood South of Market. It centers on the small, oval-shaped park of the same name, and South Park Street, which encircles the park.
Sunnydale
Sunnydale is a small neighborhood in
Sunnyside
Sunnyside is a medium-sized neighborhood to the north of Highway 280, bordered by the neighborhoods of Glen Park to the east, Miraloma Park to the north, and Westwood Park/Highlands to the west. In addition, City College of San Francisco (CCSF) has its main campus on the border of Sunnyside to the south. CCSF was built on a hillside formerly occupied by the city jail until 1934.[50] CCSF has been extensively remodeled and modernized since 2000 and offers superior sports facilities, modern buildings, BART and MUNI access, and is the largest city community college in the United States. The primary shopping street is Monterey Boulevard, from Acadia Street to Ridgewood Avenue, with small businesses, restaurants, cafes, and a Safeway.
The neighborhood was developed in 1891[51][52] as land lots for single-family houses and sold through the Sunnyside Land Development Company. This company installed an electric streetcar line to access the new neighborhood from downtown San Francisco. This allowed expansion and created "suburbs" of the day. Houses were built as individual, custom homes. Developers purchased multiple lots and usually built three to ten houses of similar look and size. The neighborhood was 75% built by 1941 when World War II began. Construction resumed in 1946 and was completed in the 1980s.
The Sunnyside Neighborhood Association[53] is the "voice" of Sunnyside and incorporated in 1975.
The residents are very diverse and from all walks of life. It is primarily a middle- to upper-middle-class neighborhood with 75% of residents owning their home. Sunnyside Park was remodeled in 2009 by the city and offers a recreation center, a children's play area and dog park.
The Sunnyside Conservatory (at Monterey Boulevard and Congo Street), built in 1902, is a botanical garden and restored hot house. It was completely restored in 2006, and now serves as a meeting and events room for community groups.
The Sunset
The Outer Sunset district includes the corridor from 46th Avenue to Ocean Beach. Some definitions also include everything west of Sunset Boulevard from Lincoln Boulevard south to Vicente Street.
Everything east of 19th Avenue is thought of as the Inner Sunset. 19th Avenue is a six-lane thoroughfare that is designated as part of
The current efforts to develop a comprehensive plan for this neighborhood of San Francisco is the
Telegraph Hill
The Tenderloin
Treasure Island
Twin Peaks
Twin Peaks refers to the hill summits near the center of San Francisco, south of Mount Sutro. For the neighborhood immediately to the west of Twin Peaks, see Midtown Terrace.
Union Square
University Mound
University Mound is a neighborhood to the north of
Upper Market
Upper Market is the area between the southern end of
Visitacion Valley
Vista del Mar
Vista del Mar is a small neighborhood of the Outer Richmond. It is bordered by 45th and 48th avenues, and Seal Rock Drive and Balboa Street. It is also referred to as Sutro Heights.
West Portal
The Western Addition
Westwood Highlands
Westwood Highlands is a small neighborhood northeast of the intersection of Monterey Boulevard and Plymouth Avenue. The Westwood Park neighborhood is to the south, Saint Francis Wood is to the west, Sherwood Forest is to the north and Sunnyside is to the east.
Westwood Park
Yerba Buena
This new neighborhood, anchored by the Yerba Buena Gardens, stretches from 2nd to 5th and Market to Harrison Streets. It is enhanced through the work of the Yerba Buena Community Benefit District (YBCBD[55]). This east boundary of this neighborhood is adjacent to the Financial District South.
See also
References
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- ^ List of California railroads San Francisco Railroads
- ^ "Old Butchertown Map - Spatial History Project". Stanford.edu. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ "Cathedral Hill: It's Not Just About You". Sf.curbed.com. 2012. Retrieved 2012-01-14.
- ^ Naval Engineering Facilities Command (March 2000). Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Disposal and Reuse of Hunters Point Shipyard. U.S. Department of the Navy (Report). Retrieved 2020-03-23.
- ^ "Historic And Conservation Districts In San Francisco" (PDF). San Francisco Planning Department, City of San Francisco.
- ^ "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Liberty Street Historic District". National Park Service. September 15, 1983. Retrieved May 25, 2023. With accompanying pictures
- ^ "Financial District South". Redfin.com. Archived from the original on 2010-07-21. Retrieved 2010-02-04.
- ^ "Transbay Transit Center". Transbaycenter.org. Retrieved 2010-02-04.
- ^ "16TH AVENUE Tiled Steps". 16TH AVENUE Tiled Steps. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ Karis, Robert. "Ingleside Terraces Map, San Francisco". Sfog.us. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ Karis, Robert. "Ingleside Terraces Homes Archives, San Francisco". Sfog.us. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ Karis, Robert. "Ingleside Terraces History". Ithasf.org. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ Karis, Robert. "Ingleside Terraces Map, San Francisco". Sfog.us. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ Ingleside Terraces Home Page. Ithasf.org. Retrieved on 2014-05-10.
- ^ Ingleside Terraces Sundial and Urbano Drive, San Francisco. Sfog.us. Retrieved on 2014-05-10.
- ^ Tillmany, Jack. "Sunset Streetcars". Outsidelands.org.
- ^ "Jackson Square neighborhood in San Francisco, California (CA), 94111, 94133 subdivision profile". city-data.com. 2011. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
- ^ The Laguna Honda Rehabilitation Center. Laguna Honda. Retrieved on 2014-05-10.
- ^ SF Chronicle "Little Russia" article; books by Arcadia Publishing: "Russian San Francisco", "Jewish San Francisco", "San Francisco's Richmond District".
- ^ a b "Lower Nob Hill Apartment Hotel District". National Register of Historic Places Collection. U.S. National Park Service. 1991-07-31. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
Roughly, 590—1209 Bush, 680—1156 Sutter and 600—1099 Post Streets and the intersecting cross streets
- ^ "The Hamilton History". Hamilton Homeowners Association.
The hotel closed in 1961 and in 1962 became the City's first condo conversion (some say the first in California).
- ^ "History of Pillsbury Madison & Sutro LLP". FundingUniverse. 1999.
...Haas and Hanie Corporation, which built Nob Hill, the state's first high-rise condominium (Source: International Directory of Company Histories, Vol. 29. St. James Press, 1999)
- ^ "Anne Buenger Bloomfield". San Francisco: SFGate. January 14, 2000. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
- ^ "Olympia Way and Clarendon Ave, San Francisco, CA". Google Maps.
- ^ Ingleside – Lakeview – Western Neighborhoods Project – San Francisco History. Outsidelands.org (2003-05-26). Retrieved on 2014-05-10.
- ^ I am OMI – Western Neighborhoods Project – San Francisco History. Outsidelands.org (2003-05-26). Retrieved on 2014-05-10.
- ^ Driscoll, Marilyn. "Cayuga Terrace". Archived from the original on 2009-02-16. Retrieved 2009-03-12.
- ^ "Lower Polk: Gulch vs Village". Sf.curbed.com. 7 June 2006. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ "If You Rename It, Will They Come? by Emily Landes, SFAA November 2006". Sfaa.org. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ "May 2006 General Meeting – Lower Polk Neighbors". Lowerpolkneighbors.org. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ "The death of Polk Street". Sfbayguardan.comwww.sfbayguardian.com. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ "San Francisco Bay Guardian". 18 November 2009. Archived from the original on 18 November 2009. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ The San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ "Portola Branch Library - SFPL.org". Archived from the original on 2009-05-25. Retrieved 2009-05-28.
- ^ American FactFinder Archived 2020-02-10 at archive.today. Factfinder.census.gov. Retrieved on 2014-05-10.
- ^ American FactFinder Archived 2020-02-10 at archive.today. Factfinder.census.gov. Retrieved on 2014-05-10.
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- ^ "Portola Place". Flickr. 25 October 2007.
- Consulate-General of South Korea in San Francisco. Retrieved on January 31, 2009.
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- ^ "New image for a slice of SF: The East Cut". Sfchronicle.com. 1 June 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ "Academy of Art University Campus Map" (PDF). academyart.edu. Academy of Art University. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
- ^ California, California State Parks, State of. "Certified Districts". CA State Parks. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Life at the bottom: S.F.'s Sunnydale project". articles.sfgate.com. 3 February 2008. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ The Ingleside Jail 1876-1934, 9 April 1891, retrieved 9 April 2017
- ^ "House and Lot", San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco, p. 5, 10 April 1891
- ^ "Real Estate", Daily Alta California, San Francisco, p. 2, 9 April 1891, retrieved 9 April 2017
- ^ "Sunnyside Neighborhood Association". Sunnyside Neighborhood Association. 21 March 2012. Retrieved 2015-02-28.
- ^ Sharp. Sharpsf.com. Retrieved on 2014-05-10.
- ^ "Yerba Buena Community Benefit District". Ybcbd.org.
External links
- San Francisco Planning Department : Map Library
- San Francisco Planning Department map
- San Francisco neighborhood names Curbed
- San Francisco neighborhood names San Francisco Travel Association
- The Neighborhood Project
- Map – San Francisco – LocalWiki
- SF Gate San Francisco Neighborhood guide.
- Not For Tourists, Inc. San Francisco neighborhood guide
- Justinsomnia SF neighborhood map
- San Francisco Neighborhoods, SF Realtors
- Burrito Justice's: The Islands of San Francisco
- Badger Maps San Francisco Neighborhood
Specific neighborhoods
- San Francisco Neighborhoods (Cole Valley)
- Cole Valley Home Page
- Ingleside Terraces Homes Association
- Midtown Terrace Home Owners Association
- Mission Dolores Neighborhood Association
- Mission Terrace Neighborhood
- Miraloma Park Improvement Club
- Monterey Heights Homes Association
- Sunnyside Neighborhood Association